|
Back to Index
Mugabe
row endangers EU-Africa summit
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Joseph Sithole (AR No. 133, 19-Sept-07)
September 19, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338764&apc_state=henh
Plans for a European
Union-Africa summit scheduled for December have been put at risk
by a conflict over whether President Robert Mugabe will be allowed
to attend as Zimbabwe's official representative.
Some EU nations, notably
Britain, have threatened to boycott the summit if Mugabe is invited,
while a number of African governments have warned that they will
not send representatives if Mugabe is prevented from attending the
Lisbon meeting.
The controversy illustrates
the divide between western states that accuse Mugabe of committing
human rights abuses and ruining Zimbabwe's once-prosperous
economy, and the African continent, where many view him as a latter-day
Robin Hood standing up to imperialism.
The 83-year old president
is still seen as a comrade-in-arms in much of Africa, except in
Zimbabwe itself, where many accuse him of presiding over an eight-year
economic and political crisis that has seen unemployment reach 80
per cent and inflation soar to an official 3,700 per cent year on
year.
The divergence of opinion
about Mugabe is reflected in the current standoff between the EU
and Africa over whether he should be allowed into Portugal for the
summit, despite the travel restrictions placed on him and his top
officials by the EU and the United States.
The last EU-Africa summit
was held in 2000, as a meeting scheduled for 2003 was scrapped because
of conflict over whether Mugabe could attend. The events are intended
to discuss aid and development, which the Europeans often frame
within the context of human rights and democracy.
African nations, particularly
those in the Southern African Development Community, SADC, led by
regional economic powerhouse South Africa, have said they will not
attend the summit if Zimbabwe is excluded.
The EU's external
relations commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner last week suggested
that Zimbabwe could be represented by a senior government official
such as the foreign minister, as a way of breaking the deadlock.
"We should not
let our political relationship with Africa fall apart because of
Mugabe," Ferrero-Waldner told the German daily Financial Times
Deutschland.
However, the SADC has
rejected this compromise.
South Africa and other
regional states insist they want Zimbabwe to be represented at the
highest level, in order to avoid setting a precedent where African
leaders to whom Europe objects are singled out for punishment.
The current SADC chair,
Zambian president Levy Mwanawasa, underlined this position when
he claimed Zimbabwe's problems were "exaggerated"
by the media.
The African Union, AU,
is taking a similar stand.
"It would not be
fair not to invite a member of the African Union," Ghana's
foreign minister Akwasi Osei Adjei, whose country holds the AU chair,
said last week in remarks quoted by Reuters. "I believe we
are coming with all the members of the African Union, the heads
of state of the African Union So definitely the invitation [to Mugabe]
will be issued."
The host country and
EU president, Portugal, has been ambivalent about whether it will
invite the Zimbabwean leader.
As an EU official acknowledged,
"Almost all Africans want Mugabe to be present. The Africans
are really making this an issue. It could be difficult to sort this
out."
A political analyst at
the University of Zimbabwe, John Makumbe, told Voice of America
that one side would have to give.
He said the EU needed
the summit as it wanted to resolve the problem of illegal migrants
from northern Africa flocking into countries such as Portugal and
Spain in search of a better life.
"Unfortunately,
they will have to accept President Mugabe at the summit if they
want that issue discussed," said Makumbe.
Makumbe said African
leaders were unlikely to back down on the issue - not least
because many were potentially vulnerable to criticism themselves,
so found it hard to be too tough on Mugabe.
He said the only compromise
was for EU leaders to brace themselves for Mugabe to be present,
and try to raise their human rights concerns with him.
Another political scientist,
who requested anonymity, agreed that African leaders would settle
for nothing less, adding that the EU and the United States had laid
themselves open to charges of double standards by failing to act
uniformly in all political disputes in Africa.
He cited recent cases
where the international community did not take resolute action where
there were allegations of vote-rigging and other electoral problems.
"There were, and
still are, problems in Lesotho about the way Prime Minister Pakalitha
Mosisili was elected [in February 2007], but the EU and the US have
said nothing. There were allegations that [outgoing president] Olusegun
Obasanjo fixed the Nigerian election [in April 2007] to have his
favourite candidate elected, and nothing happened to him,"
he said.
"There was an even
bigger disaster in the DRC, where over 200 people were killed in
protests soon after the [2006] elections when rebels loyal to Jean-Pierre
Bemba tried to stir civil unrest alleging that Joseph Kabila had
stolen the election. We didn't hear any international outcry
about illegality and sanctions."
He concluded, "This
lends credence to those who claim that the dispute with Zimbabwe
has been reduced to a personal vendetta with Mugabe for taking over
white-owned commercial farms more than it is to do with human rights
violations or vote-rigging.
"So come December,
European leaders will have to share the table with Mugabe - or there
will be no summit."
Analysts say the EU is
desperate for this year's summit to succeed. Apart from the
migration issue, there is concern that Europe and the US have lost
ground to China in recent years, and the December summit would offer
a forum for discussing how to deal with this.
China consumes substantial
amounts of African oil and minerals such as copper. In return, the
continent offers a market for Chinese exports - and at a political
level, diplomatic allies in international institutions such as the
United Nations Security Council.
Joseph Sithole is the
pseudonym of a journalist in Zimbabwe
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|