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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mbeki's
'quiet diplomacy' doubted
Allan
Little, BBC News
April 07, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7335569.stm
To get a sense of why
Zimbabwe's crisis matters to its southern African neighbours - and
to South Africa in particular - go to the Central Methodist Church
in central Johannesburg.
It has become a refuge
for 2,000 refugees who have fled Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe. They
sleep in overcrowded corridors and meeting rooms. For the sick,
there is a clinic.
"It is better than
staying in Zimbabwe," one young mother told the BBC last week.
"At least here I
can get something to eat. I can work as a cleaner and buy food for
my children.
"In Zimbabwe there
is nothing."
There are - at the very
least - hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans in South Africa, most
of them here illegally.
Some estimates put the
figure at three million. If that is true, then about a quarter of
the population of Zimbabwe has left the country.
Beaten
to death
Zimbabwe's downward economic
tumble exerts a drag on the entire region.
It causes instability.
It scares potential foreign investors in neighbouring countries.
In short, it is a headache
for South Africa's president, Thabo Mbeki. And he has adopted what
he calls a policy of "quiet diplomacy" to try to resolve
the crisis.
In March last year, the
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai suffered severe head injuries
in police custody.
He was filmed in his
hospital bed and the pictures flew around the world to predictable
international outrage.
The cameraman who reportedly
took the pictures was later abducted and beaten to death.
At a meeting of the South
African Development Community, the region's leaders asked Mr Mbeki
to lead mediation efforts aimed at brokering talks between President
Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF and the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change.
Mr Mbeki appointed two
of his closest and most highly respected lieutenants, Frank Chikane
and Sydney Mufamadi, to act as go-betweens.
The MDC, for its part,
sent two of its senior leadership insiders - Tendai Biti and Welshman
Ncube - to take part in the talks.
Much less is known about
the involvement of Zanu-PF and the notoriously proud and impervious
Robert Mugabe, because the whole process has been discreet.
New
openness
For a time, the quiet
approach produced results.
South Africa brokered
a new election law which could yet prove decisive.
For the first time, electoral
officials have had to post the number of votes cast at individual
polling stations, making it much harder to manipulate the figures
centrally.
The MDC have been smart
in exploiting this new openness - they say they have photographs
of every result as it was posted on the day.
This is probably not
true, but they have a lot, and Zanu-PF - and the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission - do not know which ones they have, making any attempted
rigging of the vote centrally a tricky business.
Many analysts say the
talks also persuaded Mr Mugabe to keep the elections peaceful -
keeping the security forces and the feared "war veterans"
on a much tighter leash.
But by December last
year the talks had run aground. The MDC later declared them a failure.
British
dismay
Mr Mbeki says that his
diplomacy is working.
In London at the weekend,
he declared himself satisfied with the election process on the grounds
that the first round had passed off relatively peacefully.
To the evident dismay
of his British hosts he had nothing to say about the mysterious
failure of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to declare a result.
And so the criticism,
and the frustration felt by many in the region, mount.
South Africa's Sunday
Times at the weekend described Zimbabwe as a "festering sore".
And, it went on, the South African government "must not allow
Mugabe to subvert democracy again . . . South Africa's strategy
of quiet diplomacy has done little more than to cosset Mugabe while
he raped his country".
Mr Mugabe had shown repeatedly
that he had no respect for Mr Mbeki, and that he had "made
South Africa's president the laughing stock of the diplomatic world",
the paper said.
Nonetheless, Mr Mbeki
continues to carry the hopes of much of the world.
Commitment
to discretion
Mr Tsvangirai may have
called on the international community to intervene.
But even Mr Mugabe's
most entrenched opponents - the British - continue to place their
faith in Mr Mbeki, with Prime Minister Gordon Brown in constant
touch, apparently urging Mr Mbeki to continue to press for a mediated
solution.
Mr Mbeki's commitment
to discretion, though, comes at a huge price in public credibility.
And the question is becoming
more urgent, because nine days after polling, Zimbabwe's election
result is still not announced.
The danger is that there
will come a point when Mr Mbeki's public silence - and that of every
other leader in the region - will start to look like complicity.
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