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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
The
not-so-diplomatic ambassador to Zimbabwe
Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times
May 23, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-diplomats23-2008may23,0,3957643.story
James McGee eschews the
low-key approach favored by most envoys. He has turned up the pressure
on the government while exposing political violence. The regime
has retaliated.
To Zimbabwe's
government, James McGee is the undiplomatic diplomat.
McGee, the U.S. ambassador
to Zimbabwe for the last six months, has eschewed the tactful, almost
invisible role that envoys often take. With foreign journalists
largely blocked from covering events in the African nation, McGee
and other Western diplomats have adopted an outspoken posture, exposing
political violence and ratcheting up international pressure on the
regime.
In turn, McGee
has been savagely scolded in the state media, reprimanded by the
government, harassed
by police during a fact-finding mission and had a staff member
threatened with assault. Zimbabwean officials accuse him of breaking
the Vienna Convention on diplomats, interfering in its internal
affairs and making politically charged and inflammatory comments.
Not that the government's
adversaries have been immune from McGee's blunt criticisms. As opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai stayed in neighboring South Africa while
his supporters back home were being beaten and harassed, McGee said
he should be in Zimbabwe despite reports of a plot to assassinate
him.
McGee, a thrice-decorated
Vietnam veteran, traveled with diplomats from Britain, the Netherlands,
Japan and Tanzania last week to a suspected torture center in the
countryside where government opponents are alleged to have been
interrogated and beaten. The previous week he and others visited
Avenues Clinic in the capital, Harare, crowded with victims of the
regime's violence against opposition activists and supporters.
McGee appears to have
gotten under President Robert Mugabe's skin as much as his predecessor,
Christopher Dell, who so outraged the regime that the pro-government
Herald ran a front-page headline, "Mugabe to Dell: Go to Hell,"
which the envoy later framed. Dell was put under 24-hour surveillance,
according to the Herald.
The day after McGee's
fact-finding mission to the detention facility, during which police
blocked his convoy for an hour and threatened to beat a member of
his staff, the Herald prominently ran a letter describing the diplomat
as a "political activist for the wrong cause" sent to
"do Washington's dirty work in Zimbabwe."
Several days later, another
Herald article said of the ambassador, who is African American:
"Contrary to his delusions, McGee is not fighting for the democratization
of Zimbabwe but is just a big player in the Uncle Tom role long
conceived by America."
McGee dismissed the Herald
criticisms, saying the paper was "nothing more than an instrument
for vituperative and erroneous information."
His missions have played
an important part in independently confirming the level of political
violence after disputed elections in March, as well as intensifying
diplomatic pressure on a regime that analysts and diplomats see
as determined to cling to power. The ruling party lost control of
parliament in the elections and Mugabe faces a runoff with Tsvangirai
for the presidency, expected late next month.
McGee said there was
conclusive "damning" evidence that the camp he visited
with diplomats was an interrogation center, with small cells where
people had been imprisoned overnight or longer. Though the cells
were empty during the visit, McGee and his colleagues saw four books
in which prisoners' names were logged.
"These notebooks
contained some pretty damning evidence," McGee said in a telephone
interview. "They had the names of the people. They had the
interrogation methods used on these people. It said they were undergoing
beatings.
"There were the
names of the people they were looking for to interrogate. They were
looking for a village head man. He's in hiding now. The book said,
'We want to find him and interrogate him because he didn't stop
his people from voting for the MDC,' " he said, referring to
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
During his visit to the
Avenues Clinic he met a woman in her 80s who said she had been hit
on the head with an ax by ruling party supporters because her grandchildren
were associated with the MDC.
"The evidence in
the hospital was even more damning," McGee said. "We had
some horrific pictures of people who were horrendously beaten for
political purposes, people who were beaten to within an inch of
their life.
"This type of political
violence just has to stop. It is getting out of control, and until
it stops I don't think we need to talk about anything else in this
country," he said.
McGee said that when
he presented his credentials to Mugabe in November, the president
invited him to travel around the country and see things for himself.
"He said, 'If you find that things are bad, come back and report
them to me.' "
The ambassador said his
attempts to present the evidence from the fact-finding mission to
Mugabe were ignored.
Foreign Minister Simbarashe
Mumbengegwi recently told journalists in Harare that McGee was called
in and reprimanded for making statements the government said were
supportive of the MDC.
"This was clear
interference in Zimbabwe's domestic affairs and in violation of
the protocols governing diplomatic relations between states,"
Mumbengegwi said.
McGee said he and other
Western diplomats made a point of inviting African envoys to fact-finding
missions and similar events. Six Southern African diplomats had
attended a function at his home where a 13-minute film on the violence
was aired. He said there was no breach of the diplomatic rules.
"I and my colleagues
in the diplomatic community talk about this often," he said.
"How far can we go? We determine it according to the established
rules and the Vienna Convention. We will stay within the boundaries
of diplomatic behavior.
"We don't become
involved in internal politics of a government, but that doesn't
mean people can be beaten without us trying to figure out what's
going on."
robyn.dixon@latimes.com
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