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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
Little care from the community
Blessing-Miles
Tendi, Guardian (UK)
November 10, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/nov/10/zimbabwe
As yesterday's
SADC summit floundered, Zanu PF and MDC supporters who had gathered
outside the venue in Johannesburg flung stones and insults. The
final communique
from the SADC summit called for Zanu PF and the MDC to form a unity
government promptly and to divide equally control of the disputed
home affairs ministry that supervises the police. The communique
did not set out how the home affairs ministry will be shared. Tsvangirai
rightly rejected SADC's proposal. Zanu PF already controls the defence
ministry. If this is equitable power sharing in the true sense,
the MDC ought to have full control of the police.
There are four naked
realities in SADC's failure to break the power sharing deadlock
in Zimbabwe. First, the mantra about "African solutions to
African problems" is vacuous. Yesterday's summit was attended
by only five leaders from the 15-nation bloc. SADC once again failed
to resolve the Zimbabwe crisis, which has dragged on for eight years
in its midst. Nor did it formulate concrete measures to deal with
the Democratic Republic of Congo's unfolding humanitarian crisis
and conflict between government troops and rebels. For as long as
the political calculus of African leaders remains unchanged they
will pay lip-service to the idea of "African solutions to African
problems". African politicians respond to factors that can
win or lose elections. If there is no domestic electoral price to
pay they can easily ignore or be indecisive about perceived foreign
problems. This has been the case with the Zimbabwe crisis. No African
leader has lost an election because they did not resolve the Zimbabwe
crisis. African opposition parties and civil society need to make
the resolution of African crises election issues in their respective
domestic constituencies - only then will incumbent African
politicians be motivated to act decisively.
Second, in spite
of the MDC's majority in parliament and Tsvangirai amassing the
most votes in the first presidential election round, Zanu PF still
regards the MDC as a subordinate party. Zimbabwean political culture,
which is largely the product of Zanu PF, does not allow for the
accommodation of rival political parties unless they are willing
to be junior partners.
Third, the lack
of a majority of bona fide democrats amongst African leaders is
crippling the march of democracy on the continent. In southern Africa,
Angola staged less than free and fair elections in September while
Zambia's presidential election last month was disputed. Swaziland
is governed by an absolute monarch. The moral authority and political
will for these countries to act as enablers of democracy in Zimbabwe
are simply non-existent. And while other Southern African countries
have held relatively free and fair multiparty elections in recent
years this does not make them democracies. The enactment of laws
in line with the general will, protecting human rights, respecting
the rule of law and good governance are some of the other important
ideals identified with substantive democracy, which the majority
of Southern African countries flout regularly.
Fourth, Tsvangirai accused
SADC of lacking the "courage and decency to look Robert Mugabe
in the eyes" and instruct him to share power fairly with his
party. However, it is more accurate to state that SADC lacks the
institutional capacity to deal effectively with regional political
crises. SADC was originally created as a regional economic development
body - not a political community. While SADC has declared
democratic norms and standards in recent years there are no punitive
measures in place to guarantee that they are respected. Meanwhile,
back in Zimbabwe the queues for food, transport and worthless money
lengthen and meander. There is no stomach for civil strife in the
country. Few feel lucky. The lucky ones are those who manage to
emigrate.
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