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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
An
open letter to Mbeki
Petina Gappah, Granta
April 22, 2008
http://www.granta.com/Online-Only/Open-Letter-to-Thabo-Mbeki
Dear Mr Mbeki,
Something, call it instinct,
tells me you won-t be poring over the Granta website any time
soon, so I do not believe that you will read this letter.
And if by an accident
of the mouse-click, you find yourself directed to this page, I do
not flatter myself that my insignificant scribbling will make a
dent in your legendary mulishness. But I write to you, Mr Mbeki,
because I have to.
'The solution to
the problem of Zimbabwe lies in the hands of the people of Zimbabwe,-
you said at the United Nations in New York on April 16, 2008. I
acknowledge your use of the word 'problem-, Mr Mbeki.
The last statement you made in public prior to this was when you
said the situation in Zimbabwe was 'not a crisis-, before
going off to repeat the same words at the Southern African Development
Community summit on April 12.
A crisis is a disaster
is a catastrophe is a predicament is a calamity. In Zimbabwe, the
full election results are still to be announced three weeks after
they were held; the party that according to partial results has
been voted out of office is holding the country hostage and printing
money and issuing notes and appointing headmen and acting like it
is business as usual. The Zanu-PF-controlled state media preach
a daily diatribe of hate and intolerance against the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC), yet the MDC-s voice is muzzled. The
people that voted for the opposition, and those ruling party members
that did not work hard enough to ensure victory, are assaulted.
Zanu-PF has effectively said it will do anything to prevent the
MDC from assuming power. And the An Yue Jiang, a Chinese ship, is
sailing from one African port to another, looking to unload tonnes
of weapons destined to arm a government that long ago lost the war
against hyperinflation and hunger. And to you, Mr Mbeki, none of
this constitutes a crisis.
A problem, then; a difficulty,
a dilemma, a quandary, a predicament, a setback, a hitch. We clearly
have different thesauri, Mr Mbeki, because mine tells me that a
problem can also be a crisis - but I will not quibble over
semantics. We have a problem in Zimbabwe.
The solution lies in
the hands of the people of Zimbabwe, you said. You are absolutely
right; no one can solve our problem for us - but this is where
it gets a little confusing, because the people have now spoken.
They have given their problem a name, Mr Mbeki, and that name is
Zanu-PF. They have found a solution, Mr Mbeki, and that solution
is to vote for the Movement for Democratic Change. It may not be
the best solution in the world, Mr Mbeki, but it is the only solution
there is, because it is the solution that the majority of people
who voted in the March elections have chosen. But this choice has
not been respected because the people have not been allowed to speak.
The votes for the presidential election are still to be announced.
And they may never be announced. And that is a problem.
Mr Mbeki, you were recently
pictured in Harare with your hands clasped so tightly in Mr Mugabe-s
that your sinews were as one. What crisis, you said afterwards,
or words to that effect. As soon as you said those words, you killed
the SADC summit towards which you were headed. And that, of course,
was your intention.
You have spent the best
part of the last five years as the Southern African region-s
point-man on Zimbabwe. You asked the opposition and ruling parties
to come together for talks in which you were a neutral arbiter.
But, from your aloofness to Zimbabwe-s opposition, your grinning
geniality in the embrace of Mr Mugabe, your optimistic statements,
often contradicted by the opposition, that all is well between the
opposition and the ruling parties, and your rude responses to questions
about the apparent failure of your quiet diplomacy, it has become
clear that you have a firm stake in this problem that is not a crisis.
It is also clear that
you have no interest in a solution that sees the removal of Zanu-PF.
You wish to saddle the people of Zimbabwe with a government they
have rejected.
The people of Zimbabwe
have rejected your friends, Mr Mbeki. You see, they happen to believe
in the promise made by this same Zanu-PF at Independence in 1980,
that the country would be a democratic republic based on one-person
one-vote. This is what Prime Minister Mugabe said at that time:
'There can never be any return to the state of armed conflict
which existed before our commitment to peace and the democratic
process of election(s).- They foolishly believed the words
of Zanu-PF that our Independence was a time to beat swords into
ploughshares, a time to attend to the problems of developing our
economy and our society, and that we would be led, above all, by
the national interest.
The people of Zimbabwe
do not believe, as do your friends, Mr Mbeki, in Zimbabwe Ltd, a
private company whose Reserve Bank is the personal piggy bank of
Mr Mugabe-s family and friends. They do not believe that people
sacrificed their lives in the war for liberation so that a handful
of generals, judges, ministers and politburo commissars could have
more than one farm while the poor remain landless. They do not believe
that Mr Mugabe and his friends have the divine right to rule in
perpetuity.
If I may digress a little,
Mr Mbeki, it is not far from many people-s minds that you
rather envy Mr Mugabe. Only your country-s iron-clad constitution,
its tight bonds to international capital, its vigilant and frankly
rabid press, and the naked ambition of the men and women around
you prevent you from embracing the joys of geriatric dictatorship.
You cannot be Mr Mugabe, Mr Mbeki, but you have been his body man
and his handmaid. You have aided him in his misrule, you have provided
cover for him before the world, you have blocked the will of the
majority of Zimbabweans who have a different vision for their country.
You are human, Mr Mbeki,
and are therefore prey to the resentments and obstinacies that plague
the mere mortal. There was that HIV-does-not-cause-Aids brouhaha,
wasn-t there, and the whole ARV saga, where you had to cave
in to pressure and go along with a policy you did not support. Then
there is the more recent Polokwane putsch by ballot - democracy
is a bitch, isn-t it, Mr Mbeki? You are probably still seething
because Jacob Zuma, a man whom you consider unfit to govern, may
very soon move into the seat you currently occupy in Union Building.
And of course, there are those unflattering comparisons to your
predecessor, Nelson Mandela. History has wedged you between a saint
and a satyr, Mr Mbeki; it must be really hard to be you.
Back to Zimbabwe, Mr
Mbeki, and here I have a suggestion. Please do not regard it as
an order, because I know how much you dislike being told what to
do. Consider it, if you will, a helpful proposal. As you said yourself,
Zimbabwe is not a province of South Africa. And you know there are
more problems in the world than our little non-crisis. Real, honest
to God, Class A crises, in fact. With a capital C.
Your razor-sharp ability
to differentiate between a problem and a crisis is needed elsewhere.
How about trying a little quiet diplomacy on the parts of the world
that could use it, say Northern Uganda? You could also try solving
the current Olympics-in-China flim-flam. And there is still all
sorts of nastiness going on in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
And don-t get me started on Darfur. So take your pick, Mr
Mbeki. You need to step back and let someone else take over the
task of helping the people of Zimbabwe resolve this problem that
is not a crisis.
Because really, Mr Mbeki,
you have done enough.
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