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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Truth, justice, reconciliation and national healing - Index of articles
Justice versus reconciliation
Rejoice
Ngwenya, The China Post
August 08, 2008
View this story
on The China Post website
Reconciliation
talks mean that our self-inaugurated president Robert Mugabe is
now unlikely to face justice in Zimbabwe but it is hard to see where
he could run from international law -- and he must know that.
The last colonial-vintage
ruler, Ian Smith, spent the twilight of his years peacefully at
his Shurugwi farm. Credited with a dirty anti-liberation war that
accounted for 20,000 deaths in the 1970s, Smith received a handshake
of forgiveness on the eve of freedom in April 1980 from a Mugabe
who had been expected to vent his Marxist-Leninist vengeance on
him. Now national hatred has turned on Mugabe.
Mugabe's political
resume features the Gukurahundi massacres in Matabeleland with North
Korean-trained troops, Operation Murambatsvina that "cleaned
out the filth" of slum-dwellers, military intervention in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, and the abduction, torture, murder
and displacement of thousands of Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) activists: These fall squarely into the category of crimes
against humanity.
Now faced with
the real prospect of him losing power, many of us believe that for
his every past action there should now be an opposite and equal
retaliation. There might be, however, a substantial part of the
present generation that will want to adopt a more conciliatory position
to facilitate rapid nation building.
We cannot expect
any support for his prosecution from our neighbors (except Botswana).
Many Africans of all types support Mugabe and really believe his
economic vandalism is caused by Western (principally British) machinations.
Other Africans
tell me Mugabe is not as bad as Uganda's Idi Amin or Ethiopia's
Haile Mengistu -- but this callous moral relativism means nothing
to the dead, the tortured or the fearful in Zimbabwe or to more
than two million refugees.
The only person
with the moral authority to stand up and call the dictator a dictator
is our neighbor Nelson Mandela, but his single mild comment about
"failure of leadership" last month during the election
terror gave the impression that all Zimbabwe needs is a few policy
adjustments.
In practice,
it is difficult to see what trade-offs Southern African Development
Community-appointed mediator President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa
can demand in order to insulate Mugabe from national or international
prosecution.
Pursuit of consensus
like the 1979 British-brokered Lancaster House Agreement calls for
large-scale compromises but this depends on the ability of MDC to
extinguish the anger of its supporters and allies who bore the full
brunt of Mugabe's post-2000 political wrath followed by the latest
post-election campaign of terror.
Many groups
are crying foul for being shut out of the negotiations in Pretoria
between Mugabe's representatives and the MDC: The 1998 People's
Convention that gave rise to the formal opposition was a concoction
of disparate civil society bedfellows.
Ironically,
it is in Mugabe's own interest to encourage an inclusive negotiating
team since reconciliation and forgiveness are backed by the Zimbabwe
Council of Churches, the Christian Alliance of Zimbabwe and the
Evangelical Fellowship
of Zimbabwe.
Yet the very
relationship between freedom and justice is a potential hazard for
Mugabe and his cronies. If Zimbabweans suddenly find themselves
once more with a credible judiciary, even where Mugabe's legitimacy
is no longer a priority issue, aggrieved citizens -- and there are
millions -- may use their new-found freedom to challenge any immunity
clause.
And international
law now makes it impossible for dictators to retire in comfort to
the Cote d'Azur or even inside their own country: The International
Criminal Court's prosecutor filed charges of genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes against Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir
last month, around the time Bosnian-Serb leader Radovan Karadzic
was mysteriously seized to face justice and while the trial of fallen
Liberian ruler Charles Taylor continues at the ICC.
Paradoxically,
it makes dictators harder to shift as they have nowhere to hide.
China didn't seem to want him at the Olympics but they have no problem
selling him arms so maybe they or his friends in North Korea will
have him. Any offers?
*Rejoice Ngwenya,
freelance columnist since 1986 and civil society strategy consultant,
has been involved in constitutional research and electoral supervision
from 2000 to the present. He campaigns for a free market economy
and liberal democracy and runs a policy dialogue think-tank in Zimbabwe,
Coalition for Market & Liberal Solutions (COMALISO).
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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