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SADC
summit's bob and weave
Percy Zvomuya, Mail
& Guardian (SA)
August 16, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=316822&area=/insight/insight__africa/
As South African President
Thabo Mbeki prepared to present his progress report on the mediation
process in Zimbabwe to regional leaders gathered at this week's
Southern African Development Community summit, Zimbabwean Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa was insisting that there was no need
for political reform in Zimbabwe.
In an interview with
the media, Chinamasa, one of Zanu-PF's negotiators at the Pretoria
talks, said: "Political reform is not necessary in my country
because we are a democracy like any other democracy in the world."
A day before he made
this statement, 65 anti-government activists who had travelled to
Zambia to protest on the sidelines of the summit had been refused
entry by the Zambian government.
This week Zambia is taking
over the chair of the SADC. Other key areas on the agenda at the
summit were the creation of a regional standby force and further
integration of the 14-member bloc.
Speaking about Zambia's
role in regional efforts to end the crisis in Zimbabwe, Zambia's
information minister Mike Mulongoti told news agencies that "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."
This is a big climbdown
from when Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa compared Zimbabwe with
a sinking Titanic following the assaults on Morgan Tsvangirai and
other opposition leaders by security forces in March.
Mbeki, who was appointed
to lead the regional mediation effort at an extraordinary SADC summit
in March, presented his report amid concerns in Zimbabwe that the
Pretoria-led effort should be broadened to include other countries
in the region.
Thokozani Khupe, deputy
president of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, said:
"The issues on Zimbabwe are so critical that they cannot be
put exclusively on the shoulders of President [Thabo] Mbeki. We
have confidence in President Mbeki, but we want SADC to involve
more than one country."
Jonathan Moyo, a former
Mugabe minister who is now an independent MP and political analyst,
concurred: "The mediation should be broadened to include other
players in the region so that Zanu-PF can't wriggle out of the process
by saying 'we can't have our constitution decided in Pretoria'."
"You can't say the
mediation is a SADC process when it is entirely led and composed
by negotiators from one country," he said, adding, "Why
can't they meet in Gaborone?"
Asked about the likely
outcome of the Lusaka summit, Moyo said: "There are no regional
summits that come up with something new."
Moyo said, since the
extraordinary session of March 29, the process has been notable
more for its setbacks than its achievements, pointing to the divided
opposition and the incidents of no-shows by Zanu-PF negotiators.
He said Zanu-PF still does not feel it needs to negotiate, as it
is cushioned by a two-thirds majority in Parliament, which allows
it to amend the constitution.
However, a source close
to the MDC-Zanu-PF talks said that Zimbabweans and the region should
be optimistic about the process. "We should wait for the process
to run its course before we dismiss it," he said, expressing
confidence that the talks would deliver a "give-and-take constitution"
that is acceptable to all the parties involved in the negotiations.
The SADC heads of state
met as a document was circulating in the media and in diplomatic
circles that painted a fairly rosy picture of the talks and rehashed
Mugabe's well-known refrain that the British government is to blame
for Zimbabwe's troubles. The South African government denied knowledge
of the document, adding "If it exists, it was not authored
by the government".
Analysts the Mail &
Guardian spoke to wondered if the summit would deliver much, especially
in light of the fact that Mugabe received a standing ovation at
the packed opening ceremony attended by ministers and other delegates.
Michael Sata, the leader
of the Zambian opposition and a fan of the Mugabe government, dismissed
the MDC as a "harem of Western agents" who have "descended
upon Lusaka during the current SADC summit, in their numbers, to
earn breadcrumbs by selling out on their birthright, against Zimbabwe's
national interests".
Zambia's founding president
Kenneth Kaunda has weighed in on the debate using similar arguments.
In a comment piece for the BBC he said Zimbabwe's negative global
image is perpetrated by people "who may not understand what
Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his fellow freedom fighters have gone
through".
"Of course, there
are some things President Mugabe and his colleagues have done which
I totally disagree with -- for example, the police beating of Morgan
Tsvangirai," he said.
Tomaz Salomao, executive
secretary of SADC, told a news conference that the group had a range
of options to deal with the crisis, including a "hard line",
"quiet diplomacy" or a "different" method.
Eldred Masungunure, a
political scientist at the University of Zimbabwe, said that most
people in Zimbabwe had "exhausted their sense of optimism about
the process". He did not expect the summit to come up with
"something spectacular", arguing that the meeting will
likely "come up with more of the same".
Masungunure said some
of the leaders "may garner sufficient courage to chastise Mugabe
in private", but the summit won't bring about the change that
is needed in Zimbabwe. He said the sorry state of affairs is not
helped much by the fact that the MDC's momentum has dissipated because
of infighting.
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