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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Saving
Zimbabwe
Samantha
Power, Time Magazine
July
03, 2008
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1820138,00.html
On June 27, Robert Mugabe
stole an election. He did so in plain view of journalists, aid workers,
diplomats and heads of state. His brutality before the vote resulted
in the deaths of about 100 Zimbabweans, the detention of some 2,000,
injury to 10,000 and the displacement of more than 200,000. His
regime systematically burned down homes and tortured people who
had the nerve to suggest they might choose a new President of Zimbabwe.
Under Mugabe, life expectancy has dropped to 36 years.
The ruthlessness and
savagery of Mugabe have given rise to two basic reactions in Africa
and around the world: fruitless hand-wringing by committed multilateralists
who want to solve the problem through "constructive engagement,"
and consequence-blind militarism by zealous moralists who call for
regime change by force. Neither approach offers realistic hope for
the people of Zimbabwe. Ending the Mugabe nightmare is still possible,
but it will require a more radical diplomatic strategy than the
world has tried so far.
The positions of both
the multilateralists and the moralists start from flawed assumptions.
The multilateralist camp claims to be disappointed that South African
President Thabo Mbeki has failed to mediate a resolution to the
crisis. But Mbeki is not a mediator; he is an ally to a dictator.
And yet Western countries--aware that their criticisms of human
rights abuses in the developing world have a neoimperialist ring
to them--don't call out Mbeki on his partisanship. Instead, they
confine their ritual condemnations to Mugabe, who cares more about
staying in power than anybody else cares about removing him.
The moralists, for their
part, have begun demanding the military overthrow of Mugabe. Many
of them are neoconservatives motivated largely by the desire to
ridicule multilateralism and resuscitate the so-called Bush Doctrine.
Such voices conveniently forget that the Bush Doctrine has never
actually been tried in practice. The war in Iraq was fought over
alleged weapons of mass destruction, a contrived link to 9/11, oil,
a father's unfinished legacy--but not as a humanitarian intervention.
The bigger problem with
those who call for forcible regime change in Zimbabwe is not their
faulty history; it is their utter indifference to consequences.
Even if one could find a country prepared to invade Zimbabwe, such
a war would probably cause Mugabe's bloodstained security forces
(estimated to number 100,000) to butcher unarmed opposition politicians
and their defenseless supporters and cause several million to flee
to neighboring countries. It would also exacerbate the suspicions
between countries in the north and those in the south, making it
even more likely that developing countries (which account for the
majority of U.N. member states) will dig in their heels in support
of human rights abusers in Zimbabwe and beyond.
So what can be done?
To start, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon should appoint his
predecessor, Kofi Annan, fresh from brokering a power-sharing deal
for Kenya, as the U.N.'s envoy to Zimbabwe. One by one, those African
and Western leaders who claim to be disgusted with Mugabe should
announce that they bilaterally recognize the validity of the March
29 first-round election results, which showed the opposition winning
48% to 43%, though the margin was almost surely larger. The countries
which do would make up the new "March 29 bloc" within
the U.N. and would declare Morgan Tsvangirai the new President of
Zimbabwe. They would then announce that Mugabe and the 130 leading
cronies who have already been sanctioned by the West will not be
permitted entry to their airports.
Tsvangirai and his senior
aides should do as South Africa's African National Congress did
throughout the 1960s and '70s: set up a government-in-exile and
appoint ambassadors abroad--including to the U.N. That ambassador
should be given forums for rebutting the ludicrous claims of the
Zimbabwean and South African regimes.
If "the U.N."
is disaggregated into its component parts, Mugabe's friends will
be exposed. "June 27" countries will be those who favor
electoral theft, while "March 29" countries will be those
who believe that the Zimbabweans aren't the only ones who should
stand up and be counted. This can be a recipe for gridlock in international
institutions--but the gridlock won't get broken by lamenting its
existence. It will get broken when the heads of state who back Mugabe
are forced out into the open and when constructive engagement of
the new President of Zimbabwe begins.
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