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To
expel or suspend
John Grobler, Windhoek, Namibia
June 27, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-06-27-to-expel-or-suspend
The crisis in Zimbabwe
has triggered the Southern African Development Community's (SADC)
most profound political crisis since its foundation, an expert on
the regional body said this week.
Dr Andre du Pisani, a
former dean of economics at the University of Namibia and consultant
to the SADC, says President Robert Mugabe and the ruling Zanu-PF
party have systematically violated every core principle of the 1992
SADC Treaty.
The treaty rests on principles
of respect for human rights, democracy, the rule of law and the
peaceful settlement of political disputes. These principles are
also the core values of the United Nations Charter and the Constituent
Act of the African Union, all of which Mugabe's government ratified.
Mugabe is also a signatory
to the strategic indicative plan on the SADC organ for defence,
politics and security cooperation, the founding aim of which is
to safeguard the region from instability that arises from a breakdown
in law on an inter-state and intra-state level.
"But these principles
have been grossly abused by Zimbabwe under the pretext that the
Zimbabwean situation is purely a domestic one," he said. "It's
absolutely clear that the Zimbabwean situation flies in the face
of every one of the constituent principles of not only the SADC,
but the AU, the African peer review mechanism and Nepad."
Du Pisani said Mugabe
has consistently exploited "the politics of memory" --
blind loyalty among the former liberation movements such as the
ANC, Swapo in Namibia, the MPLA in Angola and Frelimo in Mozambique
-- to avoid censure from his former comrades-in-arms.
"Among the former
liberation movement leaders it's simply inconceivable that they
could move against one another," an aspect that has hamstrung
SADC's leadership ever since Mugabe used his chair of the SADC organ
on defence, politics and security cooperation to justify Zimbabwe's
military intervention in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
in 1998.
Several key SADC member
states such as Tanzania, Zambia and Botswana have condemned Mugabe's
regime. Even Angola has turned against its erstwhile friend, leaving
only key allies such as the DRC and Namibia's Swapo government firmly
on his side.
Namibian civil society
and opposition parties have called for Namibia to sever diplomatic
ties with Mugabe's regime immediately. But with Swapo still firmly
under the thumb of former President Sam Nujoma -- Mugabe's staunchest
regional ally -- and Swapo hardliners refusing even to acknowledge
the Harare regime's most barbaric excesses, incumbent President
Hifikepunye Pohamba remains silent.
As if to underline this,
the Namibian army chief, General Martin Shalli, paid a formal visit
this week to his Zimbabwean counterpart, Commander-General Constantine
Chiwenga.
Despite the growing crisis,
Shalli insisted to local media that Namibia was "neutral"
in Zimbabwe's political situation and backed Thabo Mbeki's mediation
efforts.
But former foreign affairs
minister Hidipo Hamutenya, who was expelled from Swapo for opposing
Nujoma, is far more direct: "Swapo has a shameful history of
backing dictators, such as the late Sani Abacha of Nigeria, and
is on record that it would not countenance 'regime change' in the
region."
All eyes will now be
on the SADC's next move, Du Pisani said. To expel or even just suspend
Zimbabwe would hurt Mugabe, but in the context of Southern Africa's
liberation struggle history it would also be tantamount to children
expelling their father from his own house; and that could bring
the house down forever.
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