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Focus
on Zimbabwe's people, not Mugabe
Michelle D. Gavin, Christian Science Monitor
July 08, 2008
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0709/p09s01-coop.html
As the crisis in Zimbabwe
deepens, the international community—and particularly African
leaders—can play a significant role in saving the important
Southern African country from political and economic implosion.
African governments have
been reluctant to challenge Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.
For many years they seemed to prefer to defer to his liberation
leader credentials. In some quarters, this reluctance has been amplified
by a sense of discomfort with opposition standard-bearer and former
trade union leader Morgan Tsvangirai. Much of the international
dialogue is focused on the power struggle between the two.
But while it is true
that the presidential runoff election brought Zimbabwe-s crisis
to a boiling point, the struggle in Zimbabwe is not actually about
these two men, and the real question before the international community
is not whether to support Mr. Mugabe or Mr. Tsvangirai. It-s
about acknowledging that the people of Zimbabwe have civil and political
rights.
Keeping Zimbabwe-s
citizens at the center of the debate would buck a disturbing trend
in African elections. It can also create space for more effective
international action. Too often, African elections are discussed
as if they are held for the candidates, not for the voters.
In the lead-up to last
year-s flawed elections in Nigeria, I listened to a senior
election official complain about the tardiness and even the cleanliness
of voters, suggesting that they were an impediment to a hassle-free
electoral exercise. His contempt for voters was reflected in the
often-chaotic conduct of the election itself, which left many Nigerians
disenfranchised and has spurred numerous ongoing legal challenges.
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