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SADC
meeting to put Zimbabwe high on its agenda
IRIN News
August 14, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73731
The Southern African
Development Community (SADC) heads of state meeting this week in
the Zambian capital, Lusaka, is to put the Zimbabwean crisis "high
on the agenda", and is poised to take "practical steps"
to resolve the country's problems, the regional body's deputy executive
secretary, Joao Caholo, told IRIN on Tuesday.
"It's not going
to be mere rhetoric but practical steps, because we have already
set the issue in motion. In March this year, at the SADC extraordinary
meeting in Tanzania, the executive secretary [Tomaz Salomão]
was mandated to do a report on the Zimbabwe economy, while [South
African] President [Thabo] Mbeki was tasked to mediate [between
the ruling ZANU-PF government and opposition parties]," Caholo
said.
"Both of them will
present their findings, which will then form the basis of the summit
decisions on addressing the Zimbabwe situation. Everything is in
place to fully tackle the Zimbabwe issue." Caholo declined
to elaborate until after the 14-nation regional bloc had discussed
Zimbabwe's crises. The summit convenes on Thursday.
In 2000 President Robert
Mugabe's ZANU-PF government launched its fast-track land-reform
programme, in which white-owned commercial farmland was handed over
to landless Zimbabweans, setting in motion a chain of events that
has seen the country's inflation rate top 13,000 percent, according
to the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) and unemployment reach
80 percent. More than a third of the population will be in need
of food aid by early next year.
During this period, the
international community, particularly the European Union (EU) and
US, has accused the SADC of passively observing the collapse of
what was once one of the continent's strongest economies.
"SADC has never
been quiet on the Zimbabwe issue in the past; we have been working
in the background, so I wouldn't like to comment on why we are now
talking of dealing with the Zimbabwe issue, or having to come up
with practical steps on the issue," Caholo told IRIN.
Jennifer Kabbo, the sub-region
director of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, said
Zimbabwe's "deteriorating economy and political instability
is a major source of concern, and it has affected the economic growth
of the SADC region as a whole," she told IRIN.
"Once concerted
efforts are put in place and the crisis in Zimbabwe is reduced to
manageable levels, the Southern African region will perform a lot
better because it has the potential to become the richest region
in Africa."
Analysts
sceptical about SADC
The belief that the summit
could be a watershed for Zimbabwe was dismissed by Mulenga Chileshe,
director of Institute for Economic and Social Research at the University
of Zambia.
"Judging from history,
we are all sceptical whether SADC will really pass any resolution
that can bring immediate change to Zimbabwe. The organisation has
all along displayed a culture of keeping silent," Chileshe
said.
As many as three million
Zimbabweans, or a quarter of the population, are thought to have
left Zimbabwe in search of work in the past seven years, mostly
in neighbouring states, such as South Africa, Botswana, Zambia and
Malawi.
Robert Mtonga, a Lusaka-based
consultant to Zambia's foreign ministry, said such large-scale migration
presented "serious security concerns, which could become deadly
if the SADC meeting ignored the Zimbabwe crisis".
"SADC countries
can't afford to play silent diplomacy on Zimbabwe; they would be
abrogating their own responsibility. They are talking about creating
a SADC [peacekeeping] standby force; then what is it going to be
doing if they can't resolve a simple civil case in Zimbabwe?"
he said.
"Certainly, the
situation in Zimbabwe won't be resolved just now, but what is encouraging
is that there are already meetings going on between President Mugabe
and the MDC [Movement for Democratic Change opposition party],"
Mtonga told IRIN.
Political
negotiations
Mbeki, mandated by the
SADC to find a political solution to the crisis, finally managed
to bring representatives of Zimbabwe's government and opposition
parties together last week, after Mugabe's negotiators failed to
arrive for talks in South Africa in mid-July.
The opposition wants
the negotiations to create the conditions for the holding of free
and fair elections, through constitutional reforms and a dilution
of the powers of the presidency.
Presidential and parliamentary
polls have been scheduled for March 2008; Mugabe, who is now 83
and has ruled Zimbabwe since its independence from Britain in 1980,
intends to again contest the elections as ZANU-PF's presidential
candidate.
The parties involved
in negotiations - ZANU-PF and both factions of the MDC - have agreed
not to discuss the talks with the media, although all said the negotiations
would not stop ongoing political activity.
Arthur Mutambara, the
president of one MDC faction, told IRIN, "Zimbabweans cannot
outsource their emancipation and liberation to foreigners. We must
not be solely dependent on the Mbeki initiative, we must have an
alternative programme of action - one that seeks to achieve conditions
for free and fair elections. In the battle to make Zimbabwe a peaceful,
democratic and prosperous nation, we must be masters of our own
destiny."
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