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Fury
at Zimbabwe UN role
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
May 13, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=308241#
A major rift between
the West and Africa was exposed at the United Nations this weekend
as Zimbabwe was controversially elected as head of the United Nations'
main environment body.
Diplomats from the European
Union and the United States had strongly objected to a country that
has destroyed a once-thriving farming industry, has a failing economy,
an appalling human rights record and a poor record of looking after
its wildlife and national parks, holding the post.
But in a secret ballot
at the UN in New York, Zimbabwe was elected to lead the Commission
on Sustainable Economic Development (CSD) by a 26-21 vote with three
abstentions. It seems developing countries voted for Zimbabwe in
a direct show of defiance against developed ones. European Union
nations led the objections to Zimbabwe's candidacy in a heated debate
late on Friday.
The CSD's entire two-week
session had earlier come under attack for its scripted speeches
and inability to find common targets for green policies. The conference
was brought to an end with no consensus after the 25-member EU refused
to approve a paper that included no concrete measures.
The meetings then descended
into further upset after the vote in favour of Zimbabwe's Environment
and Tourism Minister, Francis Nhema.
The post rotates among
regions and Nhema was Africa's choice to lead the commission for
the next year. Nhema, as a member of President Robert Mugabe's government,
is the subject of an EU travel ban, meaning he cannot travel to
Europe to meet ministers on commission business. Nhema responded
by saying Western nations had the "right to their opinions".
"At the end of the day the majority rules as democracy does,"
he said.
Many observers believe
the result was an overwhelming snub to the US and the EU by developing
nations, especially those in South America, who respected both the
African block's decision and their refusal to be pushed around by
former colonial masters.
"When they tell
the African group to change, it's an insult to our intelligence,"
said Zimbawe's ambassador to the UN, Boniface Chidyausiku. "It's
our right [to hold the chair]. We're members of the United Nations
and we're members of CSD, and the Africa group did make a decision
and endorsed Zimbabwe."
Germany's Environment
Minister, Sigmar Gabriel, pointed out that the travel ban against
Mugabe's government meant Nhema would be restricted in his contact
with those countries.
"It would not be
possible for us to invite the chair, if it is from the government
of Zimbabwe, or to have contacts with the chair," said Gabriel,
whose country holds EU's current presidency.
Zimbabwe is suffering
its worst economic crisis since independence in 1980 with inflation
currently at 2 200% and expected to rise. Mugabe's policies, including
the seizure of white-held farms to resettle landless blacks and
to give as gifts to his political allies -- including Nhema, himself,
who was given a 2,500 acre farm said to lie mostly idle -- are blamed.
There is increasing controversy
over the nature of international relations with Zimbabwe -- last
week it was revealed by the country's state-controlled newspaper,
the Herald, that the football governing body Fifa had given South
Africa permission to allow visiting teams to base themselves in
Zimbabwe during the 2010 World Cup, while the Australian government
has said nation's cricket team would not tour in Zimbabwe.
"Zimbabwe's election
will be seen as an outrage by millions of people who look to the
United Nations for help to escape from poverty," the British
minister for Climate Change and the Environment, Ian Pearson, said
in a statement. "They will be asking how the body charged with
promoting sustainable development will be able to maintain credibility
while being chaired by a representative of a government whose failed
policies have destroyed its own economy."
Minister for Africa Lord
Triesman also stressed his opposition to the appointment, saying:
"For a Zimbabwean minister to chair the commission while his
own people suffer the appalling consequences of his government's
policies, is wholly inconsistent with the commission's aims.
"It damages the
credibility of the commission itself and its ability to deal with
issues affecting the livelihoods of millions from the poorest countries."
'Too
many cooks spoil the broth'
Meanwhile, Mugabe's
ruling party in Zimbabwe on Sunday reacted angrily to a
resolution passed by African lawmakers last week to send a delegation
to probe rights abuses in the country.
Joram Gumbo, a Zanu-PF
delegate to the Pan-African Parliament in South Africa, said he
and other ruling party delegates had tried but failed to block a
resolution passed on Friday to send a fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe.
But he dismissed the
body as just a noise-making organisation and said Harare still had
the power to prevent it from coming to the country.
"We tried our best
[to block the motion] but there were many odds against us,"
Gumbo said in comments carried by the Sunday Mail, a government
mouthpiece.
"Long before we
arrived here [in South Africa], the [opposition] MDC had already
sent its team to lobby against the government," said Gumbo,
who is also the ruling party's chief whip in the 150-seat lower
house of assembly.
The Pan-African Parliament,
a largely ceremonial institution, voted on Friday by 149 to 20 to
send a fact-finding team to Zimbabwe to probe recent rights abuses
by the police and state agents.
But Gumbo said the members
of Parliament would not necessarily be welcomed by Harare.
"Zimbabwe could
still block the mission if it so wishes as the [Pan-African] Parliament
will have to write a letter to the government informing it of the
intention to visit," the paper reported him as saying.
Zimbabwe has been under
intense international scrutiny since March 11, when police arrested
and severely assaulted dozens of opposition activists and leaders
while in custody.
The MDC said at least
600 of its members were abducted and tortured between February and
April.
The ruling party's Gumbo
said he and others who opposed Friday's motion to send the delegation
did so on the basis that the regional SADC bloc recently appointed
President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa to mediate in Zimbabwe's political
crisis.
A visit by the
parliamentary delegation might disrupt his work, he said. "Our
position is that too many cooks spoil the broth," Gumbo was
quoted as saying. -- Sapa-DPA, Guardian
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