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'It
is scandalous to remain silent'
Robert Chisanza, Lusaka, Zambia
June 27, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-06-27-it-is-scandalous-to-remain-silent
Zambian President Levy
Mwanawasa effectively put his head on the chopping block this week
after he strongly condemned Robert Mugabe's regime for its violent
attacks on opposition supporters and called for the postponement
of the June 27 poll.
"What is
happening in Zimbabwe is a matter of serious embarrassment to all
of us. It is scandalous for the SADC [Southern African Development
Community] to remain silent in the light of what is happening,"
Mwanawasa, who is also the SADC chair, told a press briefing in
the capital, Lusaka. This just a few hours after Zimbabwe's opposition
candidate, Morgan Tsvangarai, announced
his withdrawal from the election re-run.
While Mwanawasa's remarks
about the Zimbabwe crisis might not have the backing of all SADC
member states, the Mail & Guardian spoke to people on the streets
of Lusaka this week about whether they support Mwanawasa abandoning
the "silent" diplomacy approach previously favoured by
the region.
"In my view, President
Mwanawasa has every right to speak on any country in Southern Africa
as long as he is not interfering with its sovereignty. We paid the
price for every country to be free in Southern Africa and, therefore,
when we see things are not going on well, we have to speak. I support
what President Mwanawasa did," said Wisdom Mwanza, a retired
civil servant.
Justine Chanda, a minibus
taxi driver, said Mwanawasa's intervention was long overdue.
"In fact, he should
have said it a long time ago. Now it's a bit too late, but of course
better than nothing. I only hope the Zimbabwean government will
take heed of his counsel for the good of the region. I also hope
that all SADC member states will support their chairmen and condemn
the tyrant that Mugabe has become."
Pastor Harold Gondwe
of the Scripture Union in Zambia said: "What's happening in
Zimbabwe is not a pleasant picture, their people are now selling
useless products at filling stations here and they are being slaughtered
in South Africa. They are troubling everyone in the region. Surely,
the president is right. We need change in Zimbabwe."
Robert Mtonga, a freelance
medical doctor and consultant to the ministry of foreign affairs
in the Zambian government, said Mwanawasa was merely endorsing the
principles of good governance by criticising the Zimbabwean government.
"Levy [Mwanawasa] has a point, whether [it is] right or wrong
is a moral judgement.
"When the writing
is on the wall the humble thing to do is to step back so that the
moral good of the country prevails," Mtonga said.
"The problem with
Mugabe is that he wants to rule by dominion and the worst part is
that he thinks people still like him; he has become a hostage of
his own fantasies."
Housewife Mildred Muyanwa
cut a lonely figure in opposition to Mwanawasa's criticism of Mugabe's
governance style.
"You see, there
are better ways of sorting out a problem, especially because we
are neighbouring countries. For example, why say that you are disappointed
by [Thabo] Mbeki not giving information about his meetings with
Mugabe?
"He [Mwanawasa]
could have written to their [Zimbabwean diplomatic] missions here,
instead of rushing to the press to publicly denounce his friends,"
Muyanwa said.
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