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ZIMBABWE:
South African 'quiet diplomacy' tested by recent events
IRIN News
January 20, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45162
JOHANNESBURG
- Recent events may test South African President Thabo Mbeki's 'quiet
diplomacy' approach towards neighbouring Zimbabwe, analysts have
told IRIN.
News of the arrest of an alleged South African intelligence agent
in Zimbabwe; more hard-line pronouncements from the United States
regarding Zimbabwe; and recent comments by South Africa's ruling
African National Congress (ANC), urging the opening of 'democratic
space' in the country, have all occurred in the space of three weeks.
These developments, analysts said, could change the dynamics of
South Africa's engagement with Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party over
how best to solve the ongoing political and economic crisis.
In mid-January reports surfaced that a South African man, allegedly
a spy cultivating a network of ZANU-PF MPs and officials, had been
arrested in Zimbabwe last year. His reputed network included Phillip
Chiyangwa, a ZANU-PF MP and Mashonaland West provincial chairperson,
who is also a nephew of President Robert Mugabe, and Itai Marchi,
the ZANU-PF director of external affairs. Both have also been arrested.
South African officials have declined to comment on the alleged
spying activities in Zimbabwe.
ANC secretary-general Kgalema Motlanthe expressed concern this week
that the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), Zimbabwe's main opposition
party, still required permission to hold public meetings. "The MDC
is a party that participates in parliament and it controls several
municipalities. This position impairs their ability to interact
with their constituencies," Motlanthe pointed out.
During her senate confirmation hearings this week, US secretary
of state designate Condoleezza Rice labelled Zimbabwe "an outpost
of tyranny", signalling continuance of the Bush administration's
hard-line attitude towards Mugabe's government.
Commenting on Rice's statements, professor John Stremlau, head of
the department of international relations at South Africa's University
of the Witwatersrand, told IRIN that the US would continue to voice
"rhetoric" but at the same time, "Bush's policy has been to follow
Mbeki's lead. In terms of policy and action, I don't expect any
radical changes in Bush's second administration," said Stremlau.
He described the engagement of South Africa and the US with Zimbabwe
as 'good cop, bad cop' - "South Africa will not be vocal, but the
Bush administration will. [Both countries] have a strategic convergence
on Zimbabwe: it does not suit South Africa's purposes to have Zimbabwe
as the counterpoint to all that the AU [African Union] and NEPAD
[New Partnership for Africa's Development] stand for," Stremlau
added.
Regarding the arrest of the alleged South African spy and Motlanthe's
statements, Stremlau said that "it is certainly the case that South
Africa has every reason to be impatient, concerned and frustrated
- Mugabe does not appear to have lived up to his understandings
with Mbeki".
Chris Maroleng, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies,
told IRIN that "in terms of the fallout for South African foreign
policy, [these developments] now place South Africa in a very difficult
position".
Some analysts have alleged that South Africa's Zimbabwe policy has
been aimed at transforming ZANU-PF from within, through the emergence
of a reform-minded leadership.
"I think, when you look at the recent arrest of an intelligence
operative in Zimbabwe, and recent developments in terms of ZANU-PF
succession dynamics, linkages can be made between factions in ZANU
and the trajectory of South African foreign policy: South Africa
was trying to create change from within ZANU, and was attempting
to gather information on possible threats and opportunities within
ZANU," Maroleng said.
Faction fighting in ZANU-PF intensified ahead of the party's congress
in December 2004, at which Joyce Mujuru was chosen as Mugabe's vice-president
and potential successor. Six provincial chairpersons were suspended
from the party after it emerged that they had attended a meeting
to back parliamentary speaker Emmerson Mnangagwa, and two ministers
who attended the gathering were also barred from contesting the
party's primary elections for parliamentary candidates.
The South African government has come under increasing pressure
from its political partners, who favour more robust engagement with
Zimbabwe, especially concerning issues of governance and human rights,
ahead of the country's March parliamentary poll.
Zimbabwe's political crisis dates from legislative elections in
2000 and a presidential ballot in 2002 which most international
observers said were marred by violence and irregularities.
Maroleng pointed out that "pressure from ANC alliance partners COSATU
[Congress of South African Trade Unions] and the SACP [South African
Communist Party]" meant Motlanthe's statement regarding the MDC
had become a necessity.
COSATU has said it will send a second mission to assess the situation
in Zimbabwe, after its first delegation was deported for involving
itself in the internal affairs of the country.
Noting the union's plans, Motlanthe was quoted as saying: "COSATU
can send a fact-finding mission every other week if they want, but
you cannot just defy the laws of the country you are visiting."
The ANC disapproved of COSATU's first mission, questioning its motives,
which led to a war of words over the government's policy of 'quiet
diplomacy'.
While news reports said Mbeki would soon lead a Southern African
Development Community (SADC) mission to Zimbabwe, his office said
no such trip was diarised.
But Maroleng remarked that, "given the allegation of spying, the
recent developments would make it very difficult for South African
authorities to engage in a meaningful way with their [Zimbabwean]
counterparts".
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