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Retiring
Mugabe
Aryeh Neier, The Reporter (Addis Ababa)
November 24, 2007
http://www.ethiopianreporter.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=18390
At least for purposes
of public consumption, southern Africa's political leaders continue
to stand by Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, despite his country's
ever-deepening economic crisis, which is directly attributable to
his tyrannical rule.
Indeed, years of economic
mismanagement have produced an unemployment rate of 80%, with annual
inflation nearing 5,000%.
Though Zimbabwe was once
known as "the breadbasket of Africa," many of its citizens
now go hungry and depend on international food donations for survival.
About 3,000 people flee the country every day, often risking their
lives when crossing the crocodile-infested Limpopo River - celebrated
in Kipling's tale of "How the Elephant Got Its Trunk"
- and scaling a border fence to enter South Africa.
By now, emigration is
more than three million, about a quarter of the population. Yet
when Mugabe was introduced at the most recent meeting of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) in Zambia's capital, Lusaka,
his fellow heads of state heartily applauded him.
There are reports that,
behind the scenes, things are different. South African President
Thabo Mbeki is said to be trying to negotiate a way for Mugabe to
leave the scene. Yet there have been similar rumors before, and
it is difficult to know whether Mbeki and the other southern African
leaders are finally willing to tell Mugabe that he must go. Up to
now, paying their respects to him as a revolutionary leader, and
catering to his megalomania, has been more important to them than
alleviating the suffering of Zimbabwe's people.
The obvious way for Mugabe
to leave at age 83 would be to announce that he has changed his
mind about running again in the presidential election now scheduled
for March 2008. Of course, should Mugabe stand down, a fair election
next March probably would not be possible.
The political opposition
would have little capacity to organize an effective campaign in
an environment in which Mugabe has shut down independent media,
rewritten electoral rules, and used the police to pummel - literally
- his adversaries.
So a period of transition
would be required for a proper election to be organized under the
auspices of the SADC, with support from the African Union, Europe,
and the United States, in order to get a fair result and launch
a recovery process. Yet, given the brief period that remains until
the scheduled election, an announcement is required soon if a fair
result is to be achieved and a recovery process launched to halt
the country's slide into chaos.
A big factor in any timetable
for Zimbabwe's rescue is Thabo Mbeki's tenure. He has just over
a year-and-a-half to go to complete his second and final five-year
term as South Africa's president. In certain respects, he has been
a success. Under his leadership, South African's multiracial democracy
has been consolidated, and, in dramatic contrast to neighboring
Zimbabwe, its economy is flourishing.
Yet Mbeki's achievement
is severely marred by two failures. Domestically, his poor performance
in addressing South Africa's HIV/AIDS epidemic will ensure that
he is judged harshly. Internationally, his record is stained by
his lack of leadership up to now in dealing with Zimbabwe.
Nevertheless, even at
this late date, Mbeki has a chance to salvage a good part of his
reputation by taking the lead in organizing a transition in Zimbabwe.
But, given the amount of time a transition will take, he must act
now.
Even when a transition
does take place in Zimbabwe, the crisis will not be over. The country
has been so devastated by the Mugabe regime that substantial international
engagement will be required to put it back on its feet. For now,
however, the SADC should, at long last, tell Mugabe that he must
step aside, and it should take responsibility for managing an electoral
process whose result Zimbabweans will recognize as fair, thereby
providing the legitimacy needed for recovery to begin.
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