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The mediation that never was
Moyiga
Nduru, Inter Press Service (IPS)
July 04, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=33854
JOHANNESBURG - While U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's stillborn
effort to mediate in the Zimbabwean crisis may have made headlines
this week, it came as no surprise to political observer Brian Raftopoulos.
"Kofi Annan is a
lame duck. (Zimbabwean President Robert) Mugabe knows that his term
in office ends at the end of this year," he told IPS, Tuesday,
in South Africa's commercial centre of Johannesburg.
Formerly a professor
of political science at the University of Zimbabwe, Raftopoulos
is based at the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation in the
South African coastal city of Cape Town; this non-governmental organisation
seeks to use South Africa's experiences in assisting countries which
are making the transition to democracy.
He was in Johannesburg
to participate in a discussion titled 'Zimbabwe: A Political and
Economic Stocktake' that was organised by the South African Institute
of International Affairs (SAIIA), a think-tank at the University
of the Witwatersrand.
Annan held talks with
Mugabe in the course of the bi-annual African Union summit, held
Jun. 25 to Jul. 2 in the West African nation of The Gambia; he announced
afterwards that he would no longer be travelling to Zimbabwe to
help address the country's political and economic problems.
The U.N. head said Mugabe
had informed him that former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa
was already mediating, albeit between Zimbabwe and former colonial
ruler Britain, rather than between Zimbabwe's government and beleaguered
opposition.
The Zimbabwean leader
regularly blames his country's ills on Britain. London stands accused
of meddling in Zimbabwe in response to the occupations of white-owned
farms that began in 2000 -- billed as an effort to correct racial
imbalances in land ownership that were instituted under colonialism.
While some have questioned
the focus of Mkapa's mediation, others query his ability to intervene
with impartiality.
"Mkapa is an ally
of Mugabe. He will not be an effective mediator but an effective
messenger of Mugabe internationally," noted Raftopoulos.
The farm seizures in
Zimbabwe are often blamed for the country's precipitous economic
decline, although Mugabe claims the economy has been sabotaged by
those who oppose his government, locally and abroad.
"Zimbabwe's economy
is the fastest shrinking in the world. Its GDP (gross domestic product)
declined by 40 percent in the past decade. Two-thirds of the population
lives on less than one dollar a day. Inflation is over 1,000 percent,"
said Raftopoulos. Millions of Zimbabweans -- including those with
desperately needed skills -- have fled the country because of financial
hardship or political persecution.
However, Diana Games,
director of Africa@Work, a Johannesburg-based research and publishing
company, told the SAIIA gathering that there were warning signs
about economic mismanagement in Zimbabwe before the farm occupations.
She cited the unbudgeted
payout to veterans of the 1970s liberation war in 1997 -- and the
decision to send 10,000 soldiers to the Democratic Republic of Congo
in 1998 to support then President Laurent Kabila, in the face of
a rebellion backed by Rwanda and Uganda.
"Zimbabwean companies
have expanded into the region, particularly to Zambia, as a way
to cope with the situation. Currently companies are operating at
20 or 30 percent below capacity due to a range of problems such
as lack of foreign currency and fuel," said Games, who has
also published a booklet on the operations of South African companies
in Zimbabwe.
'A Nation in Turmoil:
The Experience of South African Firms in Zimbabwe' was launched
at SAIIA on Tuesday.
South Africa's policy
of quiet diplomacy towards Zimbabwe has come under fire, with critics
saying it has been ineffective. Games doesn't believe matters will
improve: "I don't think South Africa's diplomacy is going to
work."
But in the event of moves
to engage Zimbabwe's opposition, Pretoria would have difficulty
in deciding who to consult, an official from the Department of Foreign
Affairs told IPS. "The MDC has split in two. Which faction
should South Africa talk to?" he asked.
A group led by Arthur
Mutambara left the MDC (the Movement for Democratic Change), Zimbabwe's
main opposition party, in June last year. The other camp continues
to be led by Morgan Tsvangirai, who has been at helm of the MDC
since it was founded in 1999.
The party presented the
ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF),
in power since 1980, with its first serious electoral challenge
during parliamentary polls held in 2000. While ZANU-PF won the 2000
election, its victory was marred by allegations of vote-rigging
and widespread human rights abuses directed against opposition supporters.
Similar claims were made about the presidential election of 2002.
But, although democracy
has been severely undermined in Zimbabwe, Raftopoulos does not believe
that the country's people are about to resort to a popular uprising.
"It's unlikely to
happen in the near future. If it happens, it will lead to a bloodbath
and repression by the state," he said.
"This will
mean greater suffering for the people of Zimbabwe. It will mean
greater problems for the region." (END/2006)
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