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Barred
from Zimbabwe, but not silent
Celia
W. Dugger, New York Times
November
24, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/25/world/africa/25zimbabwe.html?_r=2&hp
Zimbabwe's
president, Robert Mugabe, 84, managed to keep three members of the
Elders, founded by Nelson Mandela to tackle intractable problems,
out of Zimbabwe over the weekend. But the members gave Mr. Mugabe
and leaders from across southern Africa an earful on Monday about
Zimbabwe's grave humanitarian crisis and their responsibility
to act more assertively to resolve it.
Kofi Annan,
the former United Nations secretary general, bluntly told the heads
of state in the 15-nation regional bloc, the Southern African Development
Community, which is often accused of coddling Mr. Mugabe, "It's
obvious that SADC could have and should have done more."
Graça Machel,
a women's rights advocate who is married to Mr. Mandela, said
after three days of listening to stories of heartbreak from Zimbabwe
in conversations here with refugees and others, "Either the
leadership doesn't have a clear picture of the suffering of
their own people, or they don't care."
Former President
Jimmy Carter suggested that heads of state in the region had no
clue about the extreme hardships in Zimbabwe, while Zimbabwe's
leaders were callous. He said the African Union and the United Nations
should send teams to document the situation inside the country.
"We all have the feeling leaders of SADC do not know what
is going on in Zimbabwe," he said.
Their remarks are likely
to sting Mr. Mugabe, in power for 28 years. Ms. Machel's and
Mr. Carter's connections to him go back decades.
Ms. Machel's first
marriage was to Samora Machel, the Mozambican leader who fought
Portuguese rule and led his newly independent nation until he died
in a plane crash in 1986. She said in an interview that she had
been close with Mr. Mugabe and his wife, Sally, until Mrs. Mugabe
died in 1992.
The relationship "became
even more aloof" after Ms. Machel married Mr. Mandela, she
said. "Mugabe was the star of this region before South Africa
became free," Ms. Machel said. "By the time South Africa
became free, the whole attention of the world turns to South Africa.
That was an issue."
Mr. Carter, 84, said
in an interview that as president, he supported the end of white
minority rule in Zimbabwe, called Rhodesia at the time. He recalled
a White House event celebrating Mr. Mugabe's rise to power
before Mr. Carter left office in 1981.
Mr. Mugabe "held
my hand up in front of the whole crowd and said, 'This is
the only man that might beat me in an election in Zimbabwe,'
" Mr. Carter recalled.
Mr. Mugabe is sensitive
to criticism, and these comments are likely to gall him. The Herald,
his state-owned mouthpiece, quoted an anonymous source last week
as saying that Mr. Annan had been openly critical of Mr. Mugabe.
A Herald editorial on Monday accused Mr. Annan, as it has other
African leaders who differed with Mr. Mugabe, of "putting
himself at the beck and call of the white West."
The three in the Elders
contingent on Zimbabwe sounded an alarm on Monday about the rapidly
deteriorating living conditions there. They spent the past few days
meeting with Zimbabwe's opposition leaders and South Africa's
president, Kgalema Motlanthe, as well as aid workers, Western diplomats,
United Nations representatives and Zimbabweans who had fled their
homeland.
At the start of their
visit on Saturday, the three leaders said they were on a humanitarian
mission. They ended the trip on Monday by saying that Zimbabwe's
collapsing public services — health, education, sanitation,
water — could not be fixed until a power-sharing deal between
Mr. Mugabe and the opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, took effect
and the country had a functioning government again.
Negotiators for Mr. Mugabe
and Mr. Tsvangirai are expected to meet again on Tuesday as South
Africa's former president, Thabo Mbeki, the mediator in the
Zimbabwe crisis, seeks to persuade them to form a collaborative
government more than two months after they signed an agreement to
do so.
"SADC
must bring its full weight to bear to ensure the agreement is fully
implemented," Mr. Annan said.
Under the deal, Mr. Mugabe
would remain president, while Mr. Tsvangirai would become prime
minister. But they have been feuding over how to divide the most
powerful ministries, and particularly over control of the police
force, an engine of Mr. Mugabe's repressive rule. The Southern
African Development Community has directed them to share management
of the ministry that oversees the police.
Mr. Tsvangirai won the
March presidential election, but not by enough to avert a runoff,
which he quit because of state-sponsored attacks on the opposition.
Mr. Mbeki has for years
been criticized for his quiet diplomacy on Zimbabwe. South Africa's
new leaders were somewhat noisier on Monday. Jacob Zuma, Mr. Mbeki's
archrival and successor as president of the African National Congress,
was evenhanded in his comments on the power-sharing negotiations,
but after meeting Mr. Annan, Mr. Carter and Ms. Machel, he said
the decision by Zimbabwean authorities not to grant them visas "does
give an unfortunate picture."
President Motlanthe of
South Africa, chairman of the regional development group, said his
government had tried to speak to Mr. Mugabe about letting the three
visit Zimbabwe, and was told that Mr. Mugabe was out of town and
would get back to them on his return. "He didn't come
back to us," Mr. Motlanthe said.
After meeting Mr. Annan,
Mr. Carter and Ms. Machel, Mr. Motlanthe agreed that without a political
settlement and the formation of a legitimate government, the situation
in Zimbabwe "may implode or collapse altogether."
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