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SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
SADC
mediation effort has little impact
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Norman Chitapi (AR No. 127, 24-Aug-07)
August 24, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338058&apc_state=henh
The Southern
African Development Community, SADC, last week lived up to its reputation
for dealing with Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe with kid
gloves.
Leaders of the
SADC, an inter-government body uniting 14 southern African countries,
met in the Zambian capital Lusaka on August 16-17 to discuss the
situation in Zimbabwe.
Analysts said
while they did not expect SADC heads of state to abandon South African
president Thabo Mbeki's trademark policy of quiet diplomacy
on Zimbabwe, they had at the very least hoped for some tough talk
about the deteriorating economic situation there.
In March, SADC
leaders tasked Mbeki with leading a process of mediation to achieve
a political accommodation between the ruling ZANU-PF party and the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, to resolve the country's
eight-year political and economic crisis.
In the negotiations,
the MDC is demanding a new constitution, electoral law reforms and
the right to vote for all Zimbabweans in the diaspora, as well as
an end to political violence and repression before joint presidential
and parliamentary elections scheduled for next year
President Mbeki
insisted at the onset of his mediation effort that he did not want
media publicity to derail the talks or set their agenda.
Although Mbeki
reported significant "progress" in his presentation
to the SADC summit in Zambia, analysts say there has been little
change.
In March, SADC
leaders also mandated its executive secretary Tomaz Salomao to study
the state of the Zimbabwean economy and recommend possible solutions.
Last week, Salomao
reported that the economic crisis in Zimbabwe was a product of western
sanctions rather than President Mugabe's policies. These have
included a controversial land reform programme in 2000, in which
farms were seized from white farmers and given to poor black farmers
as well as to the president's cronies and party supporters.
A western diplomat
in the capital Harare said "these two gentlemen [Mbeki and
Salomao] have been a big let-down".
"Mbeki
has succeeded in convincing everyone that his quiet diplomacy is
the way to go, although nothing tangible has come out of it over
the years. People at least expected some limited variation to the
usual solidarity message and back-patting that African leaders have
become infamous for," he said.
The diplomat
said that instead of encouraging Mugabe to reform, the SADC summit
has provided him with no incentive to abandon his policies. Blaming
western sanctions for Zimbabwe's economic crisis lets him
off the hook, as he can claim he is a victim of foreign machinations.
He said that
Salomao should have left politics to the politicians, but that "instead,
he is repeating the government mantra that foreign sanctions are
to blame for Zimbabwe's parlous state".
"This
is deplorable and regrettable. We need some straight talking if
political leaders are to change their ways. If everyone begins to
sing their propaganda tune, then we are lost," he said. "Now
Mugabe can go to his regional colleagues and tell them, 'This
is what we have been telling you. America and Britain are punishing
us for taking our land'."
A senior official
in the MDC said that while the party was keen to participate in
the Mbeki talks, the whole process was fast losing credibility.
"We are
engaged in a process in which we are unable to influence the course
of events," said the official, who refused to be named. "Some
of our key demands like a new constitution are dismissed outright,
yet we are expected to keep negotiating. We really don't know
what President Mbeki means by progress, because so far there haven't
been talks to talk about."
The MDC official
said SADC leaders still clearly favoured President Mugabe and ZANU-PF.
The region is largely ruled by first-generation liberation movements
suspicious of new actors in the political arena, which they often
accuse of acting as fronts for western interests, he said.
"Although
they talk in hushed tones about the need for change in Zimbabwe,
none of them openly expresses solidarity with those fighting for
that change," he said. "It is as if those opposed to
Mugabe are engaged in illegal activities."
Andrew Kudakwashe,
an analyst and historian who has been following the mediation process,
said SADC leaders appeared more comfortable with the prospect of
a reformed ZANU-PF without Mugabe than with a complete change of
party - which could have a "domino effect" in the region.
"Nobody
among the SADC leaders was comfortable with the sudden change which
took place in Zambia when Kenneth Kaunda was humiliated by a little
known trade union leader called [Frederick] Chiluba in 1991,"
he said.
"They
would rather have gradual change fostered from within the ruling
party. It is a process they feel they can control and manipulate,
rather than a radical transformation of the political status quo."
But another
diplomat said it was not all smooth sailing ahead for the government
in Zimbabwe. While condemning Salomao's "hopeless"
diagnosis of the causes of the Zimbabwe crisis, he said that SADC's
proposed rescue package would come with tough conditions.
He noted that
none of the reports by Mbeki and Salomao had been formerly adopted
at the summit because there was no consensus on what needed to be
done, or on the true cause of the crisis.
"Salomao
probably reported what he presumed the leaders wanted to hear,"
he said, "but there were clear calls for political change
in Zimbabwe, and aid won't come cheap. That message must have
been made clear to Mugabe and his ministers, despite attempts to
save face."
President Mugabe
told reporters back home that the summit in Zambia had gone well
and that his government would proceed with its economic strategies.
Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, who is leading the government
team in the talks, was dismissive of the dialogue, saying there
was nothing to negotiate with the MDC.
"What
does Mugabe mean when he says 'we will continue in accordance
with our own programmes to turn around the economy', when
the economy has been on a rollercoaster for almost 10 years?"
the diplomat asked.
Analysts suggest
that ZANU-PF can afford to be dismissive of the talks, as divisions
which have weakened the MDC since it split in 2005 over participation
in senate elections means it poses less of a threat.
"The MDC
will need to demonstrate that its cause is clear and that it is
united before SADC leaders can act decisively," said the western
diplomat.
"People
like Thabo Mbeki who have been reluctant to criticise Mugabe don't
want to be seen to be pushing opposition politics. The MDC must
demonstrate that it has an agenda of its own which SADC leaders
can support without being accused of pushing regime-change politics."
Norman Chitapi
is the pseudonym of a reporter in Zimbabwe.
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