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'Sinking
Titanic' tops SADC summit agenda
Joseph J Schatz,
Mail & Guardian (SA)
August 15, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=316655&area=/insight/insight__africa/
Trade and peacekeeping
also are on the agenda, but Southern African leaders meeting this
week are likely to be preoccupied with the economic and political
crises in Zimbabwe that are sending thousands of refugees into neighbouring
South Africa, Botswana and Zambia.
Zambian President Levy
Mwanawasa once likened the situation in Zimbabwe to a "sinking
Titanic". To many observers, the comment signalled a willingness
to put aside the deference that many regional leaders have shown
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.
But as Mwanawasa prepares
to host Mugabe and other regional leaders on Thursday and Friday
for a Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit, the
Zambian government appears to be toeing a more cautious line.
Zambia is taking over
the rotating SADC leadership at the summit, where leaders also will
discuss the creation of a free trade zone and a regional military
standby force of peacekeepers. The 14 SADC members are Angola, Botswana,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius,
Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and
Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe is "a very
dicey situation", Mike Mulongoti, Zambia's Minister of Information
and Broadcasting, said on Tuesday. "Zambia cannot impose its
will on Zimbabwe, just as Zimbabwe cannot impose its will on Zambia.
But we can quietly whisper to each other our concerns."
Mugabe's neighbours have
long been reluctant to criticise one of their own openly. South
African President Thabo Mbeki, a powerful voice on the continent
who has long argued quiet diplomacy would be more effective than
public criticism of Mugabe, is due to report at the summit in Zambia
on his efforts to mediate between Mugabe and Zimbabwean opposition
leaders.
In power
Mugabe, in
power since independence in 1980, has capitalised on his anti-colonialist
credentials to rally support among ordinary Africans with rhetoric
accusing the West of looking for an excuse to take over Africa again.
Among the Southern African leaders who oversaw the liberation of
their countries from colonial rule, Mugabe is the only one still
in power.
"Zimbabwe is not
a small country like Lesotho that can be bulldozed by its neighbours,"
notes Fred Mutesa, a development studies professor at the University
of Zambia. "The leader is an old hand, he's eloquent and articulate,
and many people fear to cross his path."
Many in the region are
concerned about the destabilising effects of Mugabe's policies,
including often-violent seizures of thousands of white-owned farms
he ordered beginning in 2000, leading some white farmers to move
to Zambia.
But there's also sympathy
for Mugabe's argument that he has been unfairly demonised and strangled
by Western sanctions. The United States and European Union have
slapped asset freezes and a travel ban on Mugabe and his top associates,
but Mugabe often portrays the sanctions as being much broader and
targeting his whole economy.
On Tuesday, Human Rights
Watch said: "The political and human rights crisis in Zimbabwe,
which threatens to destabilise the whole region, is crying out for
urgent and effective leadership." The group said Southern African
leaders should dispatch human rights monitors as an "essential
first step in protecting Zimbabweans from state brutality".
In a June opinion piece
for BBC World Magazine, Kenneth Kaunda, Zambia's first president,
said that while he opposed recent violence against Zimbabwe's political
opposition, "this demonising is made by people who may not
understand what Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his fellow freedom fighters
have gone through".
Solidarity
At a media briefing
last week, SADC executive secretary Tomas Salomao allowed that there
is "room to improve management of the exchange rate" in
Zimbabwe, which is currently experiencing food, energy and fuel
shortages amid inflation that has spiralled up to 4 500%, according
to official estimates.
But he also stressed
that SADC members are committed to helping Zimbabwe overcome its
challenges "in solidarity".
Sakwiba Sikota, an opposition
member of Zambia's Parliament who represents the town of Livingstone,
says that Zambian President Mwanawasa "has a big responsibility"
to put pressure on Mugabe. Livingstone lies next to the famed Victoria
Falls, just across the river from Zimbabwe, and has struggled to
cope with a recent surge in Zimbabweans crossing the border.
"All this talk of
'We shouldn't interfere in neighbouring countries' policies' is
a concept that should be thrown out the window," Sikota said.
"With 'sinking Titanic', he [Mwanawasa] was on the right path."
-- Sapa-AP
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