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Quiet
diplomacy replaced with a more direct approach
IRIN
News
August
31, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=85941
"Quiet diplomacy",
the mantra used by former South African president Thabo Mbeki in
his dealings with Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, appears to
have fallen by the wayside and been replaced with a more no-nonsense
approach.
The two-day visit on
27 and 28 August by South African President Jacob Zuma to the country's
troubled northern neighbour was characterized by a marked difference
in style. Mbeki, appointed as mediator by the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) to resolve Zimbabwe's economic and political crisis,
was seen by analysts as indulging Mugabe; Zuma was more direct.
After opening Zimbabwe's
99th agricultural show in the capital, Harare, Zuma dismissed statements
ahead of his visit by Mugabe's spokesman, George Charamba, that
his presence was only ceremonial. Mbeki was not part of the visit.
"I visited
Zimbabwe in my capacity as President of South Africa, as well as
in my capacity as Chairperson of the Southern African Development
Community, both of which are guarantors of the implementation of
the Global
Political Agreement (GPA).
The agreement was signed
in September 2008 by Mugabe's ZANU-PF, Morgan Tsvangirai, leader
of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and now Prime
Minister, and Arthur Mutambara, leader of an MDC faction, which
facilitated the formation of a unity government in February 2009.
"I decided to use
the opportunity of opening the Harare Agricultural Show to meet
the esteemed leaders of political parties to ascertain progress
with regards to the implementation of the Global Political Agreement,"
Zuma said. He held closed-door discussions with Mugabe and Tsvangirai.
The progress of the unity
government has been tortured. ZANU-PF has stalled on implementing
some aspects of the GPA, among them the appointment without consultation
of the reserve bank governor and the attorney general, and Mugabe's
refusal to swear in provincial governors, or a white former commercial
farmer, Roy Bennett, as deputy minister of agriculture.
"For this [economic
recovery] to happen, it is absolutely necessary that the Global
Political Agreement be fully implemented without delay," Zuma
said.
ZANU-PF has complained
that the MDC has not done enough to convince Western countries to
lift sanctions imposed mainly against the ZANU-PF elite. The US
and Britain, the former colonial power, have said sanctions would
be lifted once there was respect for human rights and democracy.
"We are aware that
some economic development partners and donor countries have put
some benchmarks to be met before they can extend assistance, and
currently only offer humanitarian assistance," Zuma said in
his speech at the agricultural show.
"The achievement
of an effective recovery is also dependent on the removal of sanctions
and other measures that hold back economic development."
A senior ZANU-PF official,
who declined to be identified, told IRIN: "We are a party with
a long history of negotiating and we have certainly worn down the
MDC - of course, we cannot negotiate ourselves out of power."
However, a senior MDC
official, who declined to be identified, told IRIN: "Zuma did
get some concessions from Mugabe that certain provisions of the
coalition deal would have been implemented by the time the [SADC]
summit is held. Very soon there will be some developments."
SADC
summit
A two-day SADC
summit begins on 7 September in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of
Congo. "This will provide an opportunity to review progress
in the implementation of the agreement, and for the countries of
Southern Africa to reaffirm their commitment to assisting Zimbabwe,"
Zuma said.
"At the
same time, we have called on all parties in Zimbabwe to work together
to remove any remaining obstacles to the implementation of the agreement.
The parties are agreed on the need to speed up implementation and
to find lasting solutions to the current points of disagreements.
The important factor is that there was commitment among all parties,
which make the movement forward possible," he pointed out.
Human Rights
Watch, a global watchdog, noted in a report released on 31 August,
False Dawn:
The Zimbabwe Power-Sharing Government's Failure to Deliver Human
Rights Improvements, "There is mounting evidence that the
new government is failing or unwilling to end serious human rights
violations, restore the rule of law, institute fundamental rights
reforms, and chart a new political direction for the country."
The report also noted
that "ZANU-PF retains control of all senior ministries, including
the Ministries of Defence, Justice, State Security, and Foreign
Affairs; and it co-chairs Home Affairs. The party therefore wields
significantly more power than the MDC in the government, and is
unwilling to institute human rights and governance reforms."
Georgette Gagnon, Africa
director of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement: "The region's
leaders [at the SADC summit] need to press Zimbabwe openly and publicly
for human rights reforms to prevent the country from backsliding
into state-sponsored violence and chaos."
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