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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
The failure of African leadership
Eddie Cross
October 28, 2008
Nothing could illustrate
the failure of African leadership more clearly than the farce that
took place in Harare this weekend. Following the debacle last week
when Morgan Tsvangirai refused to travel on an emergency travel
document restricted to Swaziland, the SADC organ on politics and
security convened in Harare this Monday. It was attended by the
Presidents of South Africa and Mozambique as well as the Prime Minister
of Swaziland and an official from Angola.
They know exactly what
the problem is - in March the MDC beat Zanu PF in a closely
contested election and its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai beat Mugabe
by a wide margin. These leaders know that Morgan got more than 50
per cent of the vote - I understand his actual vote was 54
per cent but after five weeks of procrastination and desperate efforts
to falsify the poll the Junta was forced to admit that Mugabe had
been beaten but that Tsvangirai had received less than 50 per cent
and would have to face a run off.
The South Africans know
full well that the real result was a clear victory for MDC and a
humiliation for Mugabe, but went along with the charade and allowed
the run off to take place. What followed was three months of intense
political violence unleashed on the population by 100 000 youth
militia under military leadership in over 2000 camps spread throughout
the country.
When finally it became
apparent that any attempt by the MDC to monitor the election would
be faced with violence and even the murder of MDC polling agents,
the MDC decided to pull out of the contest. Zanu PF went ahead and
in complete contrast to the March election, Mugabe was declared
the winner in 48 hours and sworn in, in unseemly haste.
The African observer
missions then turned Zanu-s world upside down by declaring
that the election had "not been a reflection of the people-s
will"and stating that Mugabe had not been elected President.
Battered and bruised, the MDC and the hapless electorate picked
themselves up and were then faced with a demand by SADC leaders
that they "resume" the talks with Zanu PF under the
mediation of Thabo Mbeki.
Mbeki picked
up from where his previous mediation had left off, as if nothing
had happened in the interim. We are now 4 months down the road on
that new initiative and having agreed and signed a power
sharing agreement on the 15th September; we are still trying
to get the deal implemented. In signing the deal, the MDC massively
compromised its rights as the Party that had won the elections outright
in March.
Mugabe, who by all accounts
lost the election in March and certainly has no legal or democratic
justification to call himself President, continues to act as if
he had won the election and Hansard still lists all Zanu PF ministers
and Deputy Ministers as Ministers of Government. No doubt they are
still on their full salaries and perks even though a number of them
were defeated by MDC in the election in March and all of them were
stood down as Ministers when Parliament was sworn in a few weeks
ago.
Just to compound this
situation Mugabe is treated as a State President by SADC and given
full political and diplomatic recognition. The so called "Global
Agreement" provides for a clear separation of powers between
the Prime Minister and the President and also sets out in precise
terms how the different arms of government are expected to work
together.
Only an idiot could interpret
the agreement as meaning that Zanu PF is still in charge and MDC
is the junior partner, It is self evident that the allocation of
ministerial portfolios should be divided equitably, So when, after
weeks of pointless argument Zanu PF published an allocation of Ministerial
portfolios that gave Zanu PF complete control of the security machinery
of the state as well as all resource ministries and left the rest
to the MDC, it was a step too far.
That brought the region
back into the process and gave us the hope that the regional leadership
would recognise the illogical and unacceptable nature os such an
allocation and impose a solution on the local players that made
sense. First it was Mbeki and he made a hash of things - actually
endorsing the Zanu PF allocation of posts! Then came the Troika
and the aborted meeting in Swaziland.
Morgan had raised the
issue of his passport with the negotiators and when he was issued
with a Emergency Travel Document with a single destination restriction
he refused to travel. In fact the issue goes far beyond just the
question of withholding his travel documents (the passport has been
ready for weeks and is sitting in the desk of the Registrar General)
it was just the latest of a series of incidents that show that the
Junta in Harare has no intention of allowing the new government
to be formed.
They are continuing to
restrict and interfere with food distribution by the international
community. They have retained tight control over commercial food
distribution. The security forces continue to attack any attempts
by civil society to support the negotiation process and the media
is as warped and restricted as ever. There has been no attempt to
implement the "Global Agreement" in any form up to now.
When Morgan Tsvangirai
failed to attend the Troika meeting it was aborted and reorganised
for Harare a week later. In Harare the key player was always going
to be the new President of South Africa, Mr. Motlanthe. This was
his first real test when it comes to foreign affairs and for most
of us it seemed completely logical that he would step up to the
plate and smash a home run.
But no -
after 13 hours of intense "negotiations" they came out
of the closet and issued a statement
that did not change one single element in the situation. The issue
would go a full meeting of SADC Heads of State in two weeks time.
What an even larger group of hopeless leaders will do is difficult
to imagine. The key player remains Motlanthe, he alone has the power
and influence to force a resolution and it just that that is required.
The Junta will
never give up power without the use of force in whatever form and
if that is not going to come from the streets, it has to come diplomatically
behind closed doors.
In 1976 that pressure
came from the South Africans in support of an initiative by the
American Secretary of State, in 1979 it was pressure from Mozambique,
Zambia and Tanzania. The only question now is who will do the necessary
in 2008?
While this charade is
being played out, southern Africa burns. In the midst of the global
financial crisis, we look indecisive and ineffective. By failing
to take crucial decisions on issues such as inter Party violence
in South Africa and the resolution of the crisis in Zimbabwe -
all within our own clear competence, we are failing our respective
countries, the region and our people-s best interests.
It was up to
the Secretary General of the United Nations to spell out what was
needed. He called for an equitable allocation of Ministerial portfolios
and the formation of a new government in Harare as soon as possible.
He said that only such a move would bring the political and economic
crisis under control. He is right, are our leaders up to it this
time? Failure is just that would be "too ghastly to contemplate".
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