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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SADC's
credibility at stake over Zimbabwe crisis
Allister
Sparks, Business Day
June 25, 2008
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/opinion.aspx?ID=BD4A790327
Morgan Tsvangirai's
decision to withdraw
from what he has aptly described as "a violent, illegitimate
sham of an election" in Zimbabwe confronts the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) with both its most shameful moment
and its last opportunity to try to save some face from this regional
disaster.
I have been in London
these past few weeks, where the newspapers and TV screens have been
awash with the most horrific reports and pictures of the appalling
violence President Robert Mugabe has launched on his own people;
of people being savagely beaten in the streets, of homes being burnt
and whole communities abducted; of women having their hands, feet
and breasts hacked off and their bodies thrown into flames.
I have listened to a
defector from the Zimbabwean intelligence services speak on TV of
his disgust at the torture he was required to inflict on opposition
supporters in special torture camps around Harare.
And I have listened to
people here who were involved in the anti-apartheid campaign express
shock and disbelief that the SADC countries, especially SA, which
they saw as a beacon of enlightenment after the Mandela Miracle,
have allowed this to happen on their own doorstep.
A moment of shame, indeed.
For it was not as though this was sprung on us by surprise. It has
been obvious for more than a year that Mugabe was not prepared to
allow a transfer of power to Tsvangirai and his Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC). Mugabe said so himself repeatedly, and continued to
do so more emphatically than ever as election day drew closer, until
finally he declared quite bluntly that he was prepared to go to
war to prevent it.
And still the SADC leaders
did nothing. They sat around wringing their hands and waiting for
their official mediator, Thabo Mbeki, to conjure some magic with
his "quiet diplomacy". Even when the MDC became exasperated
with Mbeki's ineffectiveness and broke off relations with him, they
still did nothing.
More than a year ago,
I first suggested in this column that the SADC leaders should give
Mugabe a clear advance warning that if he stole this election again,
as he had clearly done in 2002 and 2005, they would judge the election
to have failed SADC's guidelines for holding free and fair elections,
and declare his regime to be illegitimate and not recognised within
this family of nations.
This, I argued, would
surely give Mugabe pause and might result in an election at least
free enough to make peaceful regime change possible. At the very
least it would have punched a great hole in Mugabe's main propaganda
lie that he is waging a heroic struggle against the wicked west
that wants to recolonise Zimbabwe through its puppet, Tsvangirai,
and that all of Africa is behind him.
But the argument failed
to resonate anywhere within our political leadership. When I once
ventured to suggest it openly in a small group of specialists debating
the subject, it drew hoots of derision as it was considered so preposterous.
Well, as the Afrikaners
are wont to say, "Kyk hoe lyk hy nou!"
What is to be done? As
the violence and civil unrest continue in Zimbabwe, perhaps even
escalating into civil war, we can expect another wave of refugees
to flood into neighbouring countries.
In SA, we know from the
recent xenophobic attacks that we have reached saturation point
in our ability to absorb these refugees. There are an estimated
3-million Zimbabweans in SA, and a major upheaval in the wake of
this imploding election could well see another 2-million pour in
here. We simply cannot cope with that. It would mean a major destabilisation
of our society, with devastating effects on our national image and
our economy.
Nor would SA be the only
country to suffer. Botswana, long regarded as the prime economic
success story of this continent, has a population of only about
2-million, among whom there are now more than 800000 Zimbabweans.
The demographic effect of that is enormous, especially in the northern
part of the country, where locals are already a minority population.
Even if the unrest subsides
with exhaustion, the flood of refugees will continue, for there
is no prospect of international aid to halt the country's precipitous
economic collapse as long as Mugabe is president.
With hyperinflation now
accelerating beyond an unimaginable 1-million percent and the United
Nations saying mass starvation is imminent, the outflow is bound
to increase.
Can the SADC leaders
really allow Mugabe to destabilise the whole region simply because
his ego won't allow him to accept the democratic will of his own
people?
Is his image as a liberation
hero really so sacrosanct that a whole subcontinent must sacrifice
itself in craven reverence to it?
There is no easy solution
at this late stage, but if Mugabe declares himself elected unopposed
now that Tsvangirai has withdrawn, or, as he may do in some misguided
belief he can still legitimise himself, allows Friday's election
to go ahead with no opponent so that he can announce himself victorious,
I still believe the best response would be for the SADC leaders
to declare the election invalid and refuse to recognise Mugabe as
the legitimate president of Zimbabwe.
They should isolate Mugabe
personally and suspend Zimbabwe's membership of the SADC until the
regime agrees to hold a legitimate, internationally supervised election.
It is time for SADC to
stop pussyfooting around this issue. Its whole credibility is at
stake, and that of the African Union (AU) with it. Both, after all,
are bound by their own charters not to recognise any regime that
comes to power unconstitutionally - which is exactly what the Mugabe
regime is doing right now.
It does not even control
the legislature, has not sworn in a single one of the MPs who won
seats last March, and retains a string of cabinet ministers who
lost theirs.
Mbeki is still talking
about the political leaders in Zimbabwe getting together to find
a solution. Easier said than done when one of those leaders is prepared
to kill rather that relinquish power, and the other was reported
on Monday night to have sought refuge in the Dutch Embassy in fear
of his life.
But at some point it
will be necessary, if regional pressure can force the regime to
compromise, or if only when there is divine intervention to grant
Mugabe his wish that he can rule as long as he lives, that there
is a procedure to ensure the legitimate election of another.
Even at this desperate
hour, the MDC has said it is willing to enter into negotiations
for an interim regime, combining elements of both parties in proportion
to their parliamentary representation, to hold the ring while new
internationally supervised elections are held.
But not with Mugabe at
the helm, of course. Nor any of his military commanders who form
the sinister Joint Operational Command, who are as culpable as he
is of the crimes against humanity being committed in a country that
has suffered too much for too long.
*Sparks
is a former editor of the Rand Daily Mail and a veteran political
analyst.
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