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"We want to show all is not well in Zimbabwe" - SADC protestors
Moyiga
Nduru, Inter Press Service (IPS)
August 17, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=34381
MASERU - As
the annual summit of the Southern African Development Community
got underway Thursday, Zimbabwean activist Bishop Shumba was on
hand in Lesotho's capital -- Maseru -- to remind regional leaders
about the political and economic difficulties in his country.
"We want to show the world that all is not well in Zimbabwe, and
that (President Robert) Mugabe is not wanted in Zimbabwe," he said,
a huge banner in hand that read 'Advocating Good Governance in Zimbabwe'.
Shumba, a member of the Johannesburg-based Zimbabwe Exile Forum,
a pressure group, joined 24 other exiles traveling to Maseru to
highlight conditions in South Africa's northern neighbour.
Since 2000, the economic situation in Zimbabwe has worsened dramatically,
something attributed in part to controversial farm seizures and
a costly involvement in the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC)
civil war.
Foreign currency is in short supply and fuel scarcer still, while
inflation has soared to over 1,000 percent. About a million of the
country's 11.7 million citizens are receiving assistance from the
United Nations World Food Programme. Along with drought and AIDS,
the farm occupations have dealt a serious blow to agriculture --
and Zimbabwe's ability to feed itself.
Various elections held since 2000 have also been marred by irregularities
and human rights abuse. Like Tapera and Shumba, millions of Zimbabweans
have left their country to make a living elsewhere, or to escape
political persecution -- many for surrounding nations, and the United
Kingdom.
"The situation in Zimbabwe is bad. Mugabe is imposing himself on
the people of Zimbabwe by rigging elections in order to cling to
power," Shumba noted, as the Zimbabwean exiles and other activists
shouted slogans in front of the complex where the summit is being
held. They were prevented from entering the conference centre by
police.
Zimbabwe is one of the 14 member countries of SADC.
Timothy Thahane, Lesotho's finance minister and the chairman of
SADC's Council of Ministers, refused to be drawn Wednesday on whether
Zimbabwe's problems would come up for discussion during the two-day
summit of heads of state and government.
"I can tell you that the heads of states will be frank to each other
during their closed sessions," he said to journalists during a media
briefing -- although later reports indicated that the situation
in Zimbabwe was amongst the issues to be dealt with during a summit
session on Friday.
Noted another Zimbabwean demonstrator, Sam Tapera, "We knew that
Mugabe would be protected by his colleagues. This is why we have
come here to highlight the crises in Zimbabwe."
"People in Zimbabwe don't have voice. They are not allowed to organise
demonstrations like were doing here. They live under dictatorship,"
he told IPS.
Zimbabwe did not feature in talks at a three-day parallel conference
organised by civil society groups.
"It was not on our agenda. We believe there are internal processes
of dialogue going on in Zimbabwe," said Ted Nandolo, chairman of
the Malawi Non-Governmental Organisation Council.
"We see no reason to demonise Zimbabwe," he told IPS.
To restore stability to the country, South African President Thabo
Mbeki has engaged in quiet diplomacy towards Harare, a policy that
has been widely questioned.
Mugabe frequently blames Zimbabwe's problems on former colonial
power Britain, accused of undermining Zimbabwe in response to the
occupations of white-owned farms that got underway in 2000.
But, says Shumba, "Mugabe is just using (British Prime Minister)
Tony Blair as a scapegoat. It's Mugabe who is the problem, not Blair."
While Zimbabwe's government initially described the farm seizures
as a spontaneous bid by veterans of the 1970s independence war to
correct racial imbalances in land ownership that date back to the
colonial era, the occupations were viewed by others as a ploy to
win parliamentary elections held in 2000.
Mugabe, in office since independence from Britain in 1980, arrived
in Lesotho Wednesday.
The only SADC leaders not in attendance at the Maseru summit are
Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos; Congolese President
Joseph Kabila, who is waiting for the results of landmark elections
held last month in his country; and Swazi King Mswati the Third.
They are being represented by senior government officials.
Swaziland will reportedly also receive attention during the Friday
summit session during which Zimbabwe is to be tackled.
Political parties are banned in Swaziland, Africa's last absolute
monarchy. Mswati has further roused the ire of rights campaigners
by living extravagantly at a time when about two thirds of his citizens
exist on less than a dollar a day -- and while the country is wracked
by AIDS (Swaziland currently has the world's highest HIV prevalence,
on average 33.4 percent).
Other issues under discussion at the summit include economic integration
of SADC states, food security, and infrastructure development.
The community is made up of Angola, Botswana, the DRC, Lesotho,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa,
Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe. (END/2006)
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