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Mandela
posse should take on Mugabe
James
Kirchick, The Examiner
July 20, 2007
http://www.examiner.com/a-837983~James_Kirchick__Mandela_posse_should_take_on_Mugabe.html
WASHINGTON - On Tuesday,
former President Jimmy Carter, retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, retired U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, former President
of Ireland Mary Robinson and Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first
democratically elected president, announced the launching of a promising
new initiative. Calling itself "The Elders," the group
plans to tackle a host of seemingly intractable global problems.
Funding comes from Richard Branson, the billionaire founder of Virgin
Atlantic.
This posse of aging statesmen
has yet to specify what will be on its agenda. There is certainly
no shortage of misery in the world for its to address, but let humble
me offer a modest proposal.
Over the past seven years,
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has turned his once prosperous
country into a wasteland. Having stolen productive, white-owned
farms to award his political cronies, Mugabe now rules over a country
that depends on massive amounts of food aid, even though not long
ago Zimbabwe used to export grain and other staples. Millions are
starving, and it is estimated that a quarter of the population -
over 3 million people - have fled for neighboring countries, namely
Mandela's homeland of South Africa.
Is this not a worthy
cause for The Elders, led by Mandela, to help alleviate? After all,
if this "diplomatic league of superheroes," as The New
York Times referred to them, cannot fix the problem, who can?
According to The Times,
the initiative is Branson's idea, and its genesis arose when he
tried to arrange a meeting among Saddam Hussein, Mandela and Annan
in early 2003, in hopes that the latter two men might be able to
persuade the Butcher of Baghdad to relinquish power so as to forestall
the American-led invasion. This was a marvelous idea; had it proven
successful, it might have averted a war and its bloody aftermath.
A similar scenario would
prove even more fitting for Zimbabwe. Mandela is universally respected
in Africa, more so than any statesman before him or any in the future
is ever likely to be. If Mandela were to use his fame and popularity
to call on his fellow African leaders and demand that Mugabe resign,
there is every reason to believe that the Zimbabwean dictator's
reign would be closer to an end.
To be fair, Mandela has
criticized Mugabe before, but it was an isolated incident. Seven
years ago, as Mugabe's intimidation of political opposition began
to make headlines, Mandela said of African dictators generally,
"The public must bring these tyrants down themselves"
and "pick up rifles." But Mandela did not finger the Zimbabwean
tyrant by name; when asked specifically if he was referring to Mugabe,
he replied, "Everybody here knows who I am talking about. The
situation exists in many parts of the world, especially in Africa."
It seems that there are
two entities one is best advised not to criticize: God and Nelson
Mandela. But Mandela's silence on the crimes being perpetrated in
the country next door do not just mar his legacy as one of the 20th
century's great historical figures, it betrays the values of human
rights and political freedom he embodies.
Speaking out on Mugabe's
politically induced starvation, torture, harassment of journalists
and political opponents and other myriad offenses would cost Mandela
nothing. And there's no telling what sort of on-the-ground political
impact his castigation of a fellow liberation hero might have. After
retiring, Mandela apologized for his inaction on the AIDS crisis
while he was president. He still has time to avoid an apology over
Zimbabwe.
* Examiner columnist
James Kirchick is assistant to the editor in chief of The New Republic
and reported from Zimbabwe last year. He can be reached at jkirchick@tnr.com
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