| |
Back to Index
Another
week, another cock-up on Zimbabwe. It's not funny anymore
Comment, Financial Mail (SA)
June 02,
2006
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=14548
Another week,
another cock-up on Zimbabwe. It's not funny anymore. We've become
a laughing stock. But more important, people are dying in Zimbabwe
and we don't care. I wonder what would have happened to the so-called
Rainbow Nation had the rest of the world washed its hands and urged
us to get on with it. President Thabo Mbeki made a much-publicised
trip last week presumably to talk about Africa over tea with Tony
Blair. It's a year since the G8 met in Gleneagles. What to do with
Africa was a big story. Western masses, egged on by their celebrities,
marched in the streets and demanded action from their leaders. They
were dotting the i's and crossing the t's when everything went up
in smoke. Bombs in London ripped everything apart. And so Africa
went back to where it belongs - at the back of the queue. The G8
is meeting again in the next few weeks in St Petersburg, Russia.
Vladimir Putin has never been a friend of the developing world.
The Soviet Union was. Putin has bigger fish to fry. And, as host,
he's in charge of the agenda. In the past he's expressed some irritation
with the G8's preoccupation with Africa.
So Mbeki went
to London presumably to assess progress made with Blair's manful
attempt to put Africa at the top of the international agenda. It
is not unreasonable to imagine that "how to handle the host" was
also on the agenda. But Mbeki knows that any discussion on Africa
is incomplete without a mention of the terrible situation in Zimbabwe.
He came prepared. Robert Mugabe, in an attempt to mollify the wrath
of the international community after Operation Murambatsvina (Drive
Out Trash), last year invited UN secretary-general Kofi Annan to
Harare. In the past few weeks, Annan's office made it known that
his busy schedule would allow him finally to make the trip. That
little shield came in very handy for Mbeki in London, and he wielded
it with some vigour. So whenever the Zimbabwe question was posed,
there was a stock answer: Annan is going to Harare. Let's wait and
see what happens. Suddenly a low-key visit took on the mantle of
a mission that would in one fell swoop solve all Zimbabwe's problems.
We're clutching at straws here. But all Mbeki wanted was to simply
get out of a jam. Unfortunately Mugabe, as always, did not play
ball. Mbeki had hardly finished talking up Annan's visit before
Mugabe cancelled it. It's not the first time that Mbeki has been
so publicly humiliated by Mugabe. How much of this can he continue
to take?
Mbeki's lack
of action on Zimbabwe is as illogical, incomprehensible and insensitive
as his views on Aids. They are the issues which raise his hackles
more than any other. Mistakes were made, conceded Winnie Madikizela-Mandela
rather reluctantly after much prompting by Archbishop Desmond Tutu
on the Stompie Seipei affair at the Truth & Reconciliation Commission.
The non rapist has apologised, to no-one in particular, for attributing
medicinal qualities to a shower. Even the odd couple - Tony Blair
and George Bush - have publicly admitted what everybody knew all
along - that monumental blunders were made in the invasion of Iraq.
You admit to mistakes, learn from them and move on. As Mbeki approaches
the sunset of his political career, he should be thinking about
his legacy: how history will judge him. Unless he concedes that
a mistake was made he won't be remembered as the man who presided
over the most sustained economic growth in a long time; or the man
who single-handedly put the developing world at the centre of the
international agenda. History won't be kind to him. He will be known
or remembered as the man who looked the other way as Zimbabwe burnt,
or the man who rested on his laurels as his people were devastated
by the Aids pandemic. There are stock answers for both - we have
the best ARV programme in the world, and so on. It just doesn't
wash, Mr President. It is those who feel it who are the final arbiter;
the only ones whose views matter.
The SA government
may have decided to sit on its hands because it believed Mugabe's
wrath was reserved for the white farmers. In fact the majority of
the victims of his brutality are black people, most of whom had
nothing. They are now in even worse straits. That should call for
a change of policy. Who are these poor that we're determined to
help if the poor of Zimbabwe don't fit the bill? Or are we just
reciting the mantra so that we can feel good about it? With his
party turning against him, Mbeki needs success, good news that would
turn the headlines in his favour. He needs to stay relevant. They
are lining up to prematurely dance on his grave, and that includes
the ungrateful Mugabe, the biggest beneficiary of his generosity.
By changing tack on Zimbabwe, Mbeki will not be betraying his beloved
Africa project; he will be remaining true to its spirit. You can't
preach to others if you can't sweep your own backyard.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|