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Comment:
Southern Africa must show its teeth
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 13, 08-Mar-05)
By Allister
Sparks in Johannesburg
March 08, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_013_2_eng.txt
Zimbabwe's parliamentary
elections are fast becoming less a test of President Robert Mugabe's credibility,
which is already in tatters, but that of the Southern African Development
Community, SADC, the region's premier political grouping.
The 14-nation organisation
expended energy six months ago drafting guidelines for free and fair elections
at a summit in Mauritius, a document that won worldwide acclaim.
It was even signed
by President Mugabe. Yet the SADC is showing a painful lack of political
will to apply it in Zimbabwe.
The organisation has
all the teeth it needs to enforce compliance. The guidelines are embedded
in the 1992 SADC Treaty and are binding on member countries.
Sanctions can be applied
against a member country which violates the guidelines or "implements
policies which undermine the principles and objectives of SADC".
Zimbabwe has done
both, yet SADC remains silent and Mugabe continues to treat the guidelines
with contempt.
A little real pressure
- such as a stern warning that unless the guidelines are complied with,
the SADC observer team will have to declare the elections illegitimate
- would surely have brought Mugabe to heel. He may not give a damn about
condemnation from British prime minister Tony Blair, United States president
George Bush or the European Union, but he certainly would not want to
be censured by his fellow Africans.
Of course, any such
warning would have to carry a credible threat of implementation – and
this is where SADC falls down. Mugabe counts on his regional partners
not having the stomach to act against him, and so he leads them a merry
dance.
In the end, it is
SADC more than the Zimbabwean leader that will pay the price in terms
of lost credibility in the developed world, where it has an important
role to play in negotiating a better deal for the struggling nations of
Africa.
South African president
Thabo Mbeki's doctrine of delivering good governance in Africa in exchange
for better trading opportunities in the developed world will be the prime
victim.
Incredibly, Mbeki
has provoked astonishment and anger by saying Zimbabwe's March 31 elections
- already heavily rigged by Mugabe - will be free and fair.
Pius Ncube, the outspoken
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, has observed that Mbeki "would
be booed in the streets" if he was to speak to Zimbabwe's ordinary people
and ask them what they thought about his view of their country.
The archbishop, who
said he had refused an offer from Mugabe of a confiscated white farm in
exchange for keeping silent, said, "The people don't know why Mbeki is
supporting Mugabe. They don't understand it. The people of Zimbabwe have
no respect for Mbeki."
By contrast, Zwelinzima
Vavi, the leader of the Congress of South African Trade Unions, Cosatu
- the key partner of Mbeki's ruling African National Congress - has said
it is already too late to save Zimbabwe's electoral process, and that
the political dice are so irretrievably stacked against the opposition
that, with only three weeks to go, the election cannot possibly be free
and fair.
And George Bizos,
the renowned South African human rights lawyer who defended Nelson Mandela
in the Rivonia trial 40 years ago, said in a recent interview in London,
"Mr Mugabe would like this election to be certified as free and fair in
the hope of getting some relief from the terrible situation which he has
led his country to.
"I don't think
that he should get such a certificate, because in order to have a free
and fair election you have to have the rule of law, an impartial and independent
judiciary…, prosecuting authority and competent police force. None of
these things exist, nor can they be put in place before election day."
In a recent radio
interview, Mbeki spoke positively about the appointment of an independent
electoral commission in Zimbabwe. He also expressed confidence that an
SADC observer team would be invited to the country, as required by SADC
guidelines. His foreign minister, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, said she also
believed the elections would be free and fair, and pointed out that President
Mugabe had called for a violence-free election.
There are gaping holes
in these assertions. Mugabe's call for a peaceful election is meaningless,
since it is his government that instigated the violent repression of opponents
which has been going on for years. The ZANU PF youth militia - the so-called
Green Bombers - along with the police and army, are still intimidating
and beating up opposition supporters, while the government is blatantly
using food distribution in the starving rural areas to secure support
for the ruling party.
Free electioneering
is impossible. Under the notorious Public Order and Security Act - resembling
similar repressive legislation in the old apartheid South Africa - the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, must apply for police
permission to hold meetings, and this is frequently turned down.
Nor does the opposition
have fair access to the state-owned media, as SADC guidelines require.
When the MDC launched its election campaign it was, for the first time,
given airtime on state television in the form of a four-minute report.
But this was immediately followed by a two-hour interview with President
Mugabe. State-owned newspapers - and so serious has been the crackdown
on the media that there is no longer an independent daily press - refuse
to accept paid MDC election advertisements while publishing reams of free
ZANU PF propaganda.
The most important
independent newspaper, the Daily News, remains banned. The Supreme Court
was to deliver judgement on an appeal against the ban on February 7, and
rumour has it the ruling is in the paper's favour, but nothing has yet
appeared.
Last month, three
leading Zimbabwe-based journalists - Jan Raath, Angus Shaw and Brian Latham
- fled the country after heavy-handed police raids and the seizure of
their equipment.
As for the "independent"
electoral body, it is nothing of the sort. The opposition was presented
with a short-list of candidates, none of whom was acceptable to them.
"All we could do was choose the least bad," they said. To cap that, the
president made one of his most controversial appointments by naming a
judge who is one of his loyalists to chair the election commission.
Moreover, and crucially,
this new commission is pure window-dressing. It is not the supreme body
in charge of the election, but is subordinate to another body, the Electoral
Supervisory Commission, made up entirely of staunch ZANU PF loyalists.
But worst of all is
the absence of independent observer teams to take note of these delinquencies
and to pressure the Mugabe government into complying with SADC guidelines.
Observer teams from Britain, the Commonwealth, the US and the EU have
been banned by Mugabe. The SADC's own observer team should have been allowed
into the country 90 days before polling day, but it is yet to arrive.
The reason for all
this obfuscation is blindingly obvious. The critical rigging is being
done in advance and the regime wants no truly independent observers around
to see what is happening. Carefully selected observers will be allowed
in only once the nefarious work is completed.
Will these observers
ignore what went on prior to their arrival, and blandly proclaim the election
to have been free and fair? That is what the Mugabe regime is counting
on them doing. It will be a travesty if they play ball.
As for the SADC, any
such connivance would be a monumental blunder. Its reputation is far more
important in the southern Africa region than any futile attempt to save
face for Mugabe. It needs to speak up and show that it has the courage
of its own stated principles.
*Allister Sparks
is a distinguished author and international prize-winning journalist,
who was editor of the Rand Daily Mail before becoming Africa correspondent
of the Washington Post and the London Observer.
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