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Human
rights double standards exhibited as President Mugabe addresses
65th session of the United Nations General Assembly
Youth Forum
September 28, 2012
President Robert
Mugabe addressed the UN General Assembly on Wednesday 26th of September
2012, as part of the opening of the 65th session of the Assembly.
Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe since independence. He is also a long-standing
critic of the West, which was once again made very apparent in this
speech. Mugabe delivered a scathing critique of mainly the recent
actions taken by the U.S, U.N and NATO, in relation to the Arab
Spring. Speaking firmly, the 88-year old president accused the Security
Council of ignoring the provisions of the United Nations Charter
dealing with the peaceful settlement of disputes, and of instead
having an "insatiable appetite for war, embargoes, sanctions
and other punitive actions." He thereby set the stage for
a very critical and at times deliberately sarcastic speech, aimed
at wanting to frame "certain powerful members" of NATO
in a negative light, most specifically the Western permanent members
such as the U.S, United Kingdom and France.
The President
focused a great deal on how the UN Security Council had allowed
itself to be "abused" last year by authorizing all necessary
measures to protect civilians in Libya in a NATO operation that
eventually toppled Gaddadfi's government and led to his death at
the hands of Libyan rebels. He urged the UN to, "never allow
itself to be abused by any member state or group of States that
seeks to achieve parochial partisan goals." Furthermore, he
mentioned how there is an increasing trend by NATO states, "inspired
by the arrogant belief that they are the most powerful among us",
to resort to unilateralism and military hegemony, citing the Iraq
war as well as the international intervention in Libya. According
to Mugabe, these decisions by some of the UN member states, is the
"very antithesis of the basic principles of the UN."
Numerous times, he referred to the western NATO states as "the
warmongers of our world" and noted how they have done enough
harm by imposing themselves and creating chaos in places of peace.
Some of the doctrines in the UN Charter were also at fault. According
to Mugabe, Libya had been made equally unstable, following NATO's
"deceitful intervention under the sham cover of Chapter VII
of the Charter of the United Nations and he phoney principle of
the responsibility to protect".
Overall, however,
the most provocative statement raised in this speech, came when
Mugabe brought up the issue that President Barack Obama had focused
on in his speech the previous day; the attack on the U.S mission
in Benghazi on September 11th 2012, which resulted in the death
of the U.S Ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens as well as three
other Americans. Speaking with deliberate irony, Mugabe praised
the "most glowing and most moving" speech by Obama in
which he mourned Stevens death, and went on to say that; "As
we in spirit join the United States in condemning that death, shall
the United States also join us in condemning that barbaric death
of the head of state of Libya, Gaddafi? It was a loss, a great loss,
to Africa, a tragic loss to Africa." He was thereby officially
comparing the death of Gaddafi, long term leader of Libya and responsible
for the deaths of thousands during the Libyan revolution in 2011,
to Christopher Stevens. Mugabe however, made it clear that the death
of Gaddaffi "must be seen in the same tragic manner as the
death of Chris Stevens. We condemn both of them".
One reason why
Mugabe was a strong ally of Gadaffi could be found in the fact that
Mugabe himself, is widely criticized for turning what was once one
of Africa's strongest economies into a basket case and has been
accused of hanging on to power through vote-rigging. Zimbabwe's
human rights record under Mugabe, has not been the most creditable
and it is therefore also fairly ironic that he would bring up the
accusation that the U.N. Security Council does not live up to its
principles of good governance, democracy or justice, due to its
lack of having any permanent African representation; when in fact
these are the main issues which Zimbabwe are violating. The speech
only succeeds in losing more credibility, when Mugabe criticises
certain UN conventions and doctrines, which threaten his own dictatorial
rule, such as the Responsibility to Protect clause, which is a fairly
new international security and human rights norm which justifies
the intervention of the international community when acts of genocide,
war crimes, ethnic cleansing or crimes against humanity are being
committed, such as in Libya.
Not surprisingly,
other leaders which spoke at the UN General Assembly on Wednesday,
notably Bolivias leftist president, Evo Morales and Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, also criticized the United States and other
Western states for what they see as economic and political bullying.
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