| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
crisis and Thabo Mbeki-s role
Tapiwa Kapurura
April 05, 2008
Lately, Zimbabwe has
been placed on the spotlight. A week after elections were held on
March 29th this year, the current government finds it hard to announce
election results. It-s now public knowledge that the deliberate
delay in announcement is because they lost the election. Now the
government is plotting massive violence on its people to instill
fear into the electorate and thereby coerce voters to their side.
To an average Zimbabwean-s surprise and concern, Thabo Mbeki,
the President of South Africa, takes advantage of his office platform
and asks the UN Security Council and any other international watch
groups to stay away.
Those who advocate that,
"Africa should be left alone to solve its own problems",
are ignoring the implications of dictatorial tendencies witnessed
through most of the contemporary African leadership. Many refugees
fleeing from evil curmudgeons in African leadership ranks are doing
so after experiencing endless civil wars, genocides, poverty, inflation,
deteriorating health standards and purposeful destruction of education
systems. These are just but a few examples of the effects of despotism.
Through the "shoot-them-before-they-grow" policy, African
despots now prefer to give less education to their people to cut
activism. Given the bleak future of an isolated Africa, the only
way out of this mess is to consult and jointly work with major world
bodies to realize corruption free, civilized and responsible governments
that exist to serve the people under peaceful environments.
Africa remains heavily
mired with restlessness. Bickering metastasizes in most parts and
the proponents of such injustice are the ones who call for "respect
on sovereignty". While such a reason is crucial, it would
be only fair if the African leadership demonstrated maturity and
civility in respecting the will of the electorate among many other
issues that constantly arise. Greed, selfishness and corruption
must be urgently stopped but then it becomes a problem when the
practitioners of bad governance call for respect as they abuse "sovereignty."
In particular, today
President Mbeki has demonstrated his partiality in handling the
crisis in Zimbabwe. This Montana sized country has been ruled by
one President for 28 years and has one of the biggest cabinets in
the world. The period of rule by President Robert Mugabe has been
underlined by the world-s highest inflation, record-breaking
statistics on brain-drain, historical poverty and never-seen-before
shortages on food and fuel and power.
Despite public out cry,
futile protests and national disgruntlement, the obstinate President
Mugabe has defiantly managed to hang on to power for this long because
of vote rigging and instilling fear among the electorate. Every
five years marking a Presidential term of office, an election has
been run. The President has always emerged the "winner".
In such elections, uniformed forces are each forced to vote even
twice for the President ahead of the official dates. The voting
takes place in the army camps where the votes are kept in safety
until the arrival of the official date. The period leading to election
time is mired with violence as people are tortured by recruited
military youths who have to descend on the innocent public to instill
fear among the electorate. In that violent atmosphere, any opposition
party is denied news coverage on campaigns. Even putting on a t-shirt
for the opposition party attracts grievous bodily harm, let alone
murder by the night. On Election Day, the situation is often tense
and in remote areas the electorate is cowed to vote for the President
as norm.
On ballot counting, there
is no accountability. Those who take charge of the counting process
are loyal appointees or henchmen who simply call out numbers as
they wish. No one can challenge that. Some ballot boxes are brought
in from "God-knows-where". After the election results
are announced, with the President as "winner", there
will be a cleansing exercise. This involves analyzing ballot votes
to check the areas where the President was proved unpopular. Once
identified and listed, military youths are assigned to those areas
to execute a retribution exercise. They administer torture or even
kill those suspects who may not have voted for the President.
This is the normal ordinary
situation in today-s most talked about African nation. After
such horrible experiences, there are always African statesmen who
seem to be respected by the world to give an insight about the situation
on the ground. These are leaders like the Honorable President Thabo
Mbeki of South Africa. President Mbeki has for some time been held
as a trustworthy party on African affairs by the First World. The
reason is that he succeeded President Nelson Mandela, a respected
African statesman and world hero. Secondly, the economic and political
situation in South Africa remains favorable for the country to prosper
since it operates and functions like a First World country. In the
past, President Mbeki has openly told the world to mind its own
business, suggesting that African leadership is wise enough to sort
its own issues. On more than one occasion he has been quoted saying
that "Only Zimbabweans could solve their problems better."
In another instance he has been quoted blaming the United Kingdom
for Zimbabwe-s problems based on historical colonial imbalances.
When dealing with the crisis in Zimbabwe, Mbeki prefers to adopt
what he calls, "Quiet diplomacy." This is a situation
in which the peace negotiator or the expected mediator keeps the
world-s attention away, promising them great and positive
results, while passively acknowledging, acquiescing and condoning
the status quo to go unchecked until the dominant one in a given
crisis dominates full and punishes the other party to full satisfaction.
Under this "quiet diplomacy", the UN security council,
SADC (the sub-regional organization in Africa)and Arfica Union all
bank on the supposed peace broker. On August 15, 2007, The Businessday
newspaper quoted Tony Leon, a South African Democratic Alliance
Foreign Affairs spokesman who said, "Quiet diplomacy is a
farce. The President-s negotiations are a front for political
accommodation, and South Africa-s foreign policy towards Zimbabwe
is nothing more than an excuse wrapped in sympathy inside a set
of undemocratic first principles."
While Mbeki-s
office receives reports from Zimbabwe citizens about violence, torture,
intimidation and loss of lives, the message from that office to
the world remains that, "All will be in control." The
passiveness of President Mbeki on Zimbabwe-s crisis has lately
aroused a lot of suspicions among the people of Zimbabwe. Many take
his silence as inciting abuse of human rights and bad governance.
This many fear, may provide a blue print for future bad practices
and build a misguided precedent.
In 2005, President Mbeki wrongly misled the American Press, choosing
to align the causes of Zimbabwe problems to drought in the country.
Real issues were never discussed. Speaking to the AFP this week,
President Mbeki expressed hope that the situation in Zimbabwe was
manageable.
It is now beyond cavil,
that President Mbeki openly supports the regime in Zimbabwe. While
the world may be misled about the situation, President Mbeki emerges
as the wolf in a sheep skin since he is giving wrong and dangerous
signals about Zimbabwe updates to the world. It is unfortunate in
that the honorable President is letting down those who have entrusted
him with the capacity to help resolve issues. He remains vacillating
and interested in the issues. While he seems to champion the cause
of civility and sensible government, he still remains a Mugabe loyalist
who is up to protect the unpopular policies by any diplomatic avenues
available. As demonstrated by various incidents of passiveness,
no other better evidence can satisfy this proposition.
Research shows that President
Mbeki and Mugabe have a few aspects in common. Both attended Moscow
military schools and came out polished students of Marxist Leninist
doctrines. Both seem to believe in the anti-West doctrines when
handling African affairs. As such the common African belief that
"the head of household is never at fault" still reigns
supreme on their agenda. Thabo Mbeki-s ANC party once received
military help from Zimbabwe during the apartheid era. That helped
cultivate future unflappable support for Mugabe from Mbeki. As such
Mbeki is duty-bound not to backtrack on that loyalty.
The unfortunate
aspect of this whole issue is that the world still trusts President
Mbeki to give direction and wise counsel about the way to resolve
the Zimbabwe crisis. As an interested party President Mbeki exploits
this trust, choosing to pursue an ulterior motive at the expense
of the ordinary Zimbabwean citizen who is living under fear in his
own land. Mbeki will tell the world, the UN Security Council, the
Africa Union and the European Union to, "Stay away and let
Zimbabwe solve its own problems." Literally, this means, "Please
let Mugabe rule forever, abuse electorate as he wishes, torture,
kill and maim people, rig elections, and do what he wants. Zimbabwe
will never be colonized again." Many keep wondering how many
people have to be killed before serious attention and resolution
is drawn onto the crisis. Many too are wondering why the UN Security
Council is failing to send its own independent observers into Zimbabwe
instead of relying on hearsay from another African President.
For the supporters of Mugabe-s policies, the golden questions
are, "If they have incredible faith in his government, then
why is there a record shortage of food and medicines? Why is inflation
the highest in the world? Where is fuel and power? Why are teachers
and lawyers being persecuted? Why should the education system be
destroyed?" Surely if the people of Zimbabwe were happy and
comfortable, would there be any vote rigging? Every citizen would
freely vote for a good and honest leader. President Mbeki should
be honest and sincere enough to faithfully represent the voices
of the ordinary person rather than mislead the world regarding the
crisis in Zimbabwe. The time for the UN Security Council to make
a move is now. The silence of good men is more harmful than the
evil works of bad men.
*Tapiwa
Kapurura is a Zimbabwean attorney based in Dallas Texas. He is the
author of a book titled "Touching the American Rainbow"
(available on www.amazon.com),
a narrative of the implications of bad governance and the consequent
painful immigrant experiences. He can be contacted at: tapiwa2002@yahoo.com.
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
|