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Zimbabwe-s slow burning crisis could affect Africa
Donald
Steinberg, YaleGlobal Online
June 30, 2009
http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=12519
After a few
moments of international attention when Morgan Tsvangirai and his
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) formed a unity government with
their long-time oppressors, Zimbabwe has now been eclipsed by more
dramatic headlines from elsewhere. The challenges of rebuilding
the country-s ruined political and economic systems are daunting,
and the global recession has seriously hurt trade and investment
opportunities, as well as remittances from diaspora workers that
provide eight percent of the country-s GDP. Meanwhile, foreign
donors are understandably repulsed by the prospect of having to
support a government still associated with Robert Mugabe and his
ZANU-PF hardliners. Yet strong arguments exist for the world to
swallow hard and come to the country-s aid.
After years
of self-inflicted economic degradation, abusive government, massive
displacement and the collapse of its social infrastructure, Zimbabwe
is showing tentative signs of recovery. Hope has surfaced as prices
stabilize; the government begins to function after a fashion; civil
servants receive small stipends; cross-party cooperation emerges
in parliament; schools and hospitals re-open; and humanitarian assistance
picks up. Even in the face of non-cooperation - some would
say, "subversion" - by government hold-overs like
the reserve bank governor, the attorney general, and the security
establishment, Zimbabwe seems poised to defy the skeptics.
But Zimbabwe-s
timing is awful. It is seeking massive foreign assistance -
the government-s recovery plan calls for about $8.5 billion
over the next two-to-three years - and private investment
just when donors and international development agencies alike are
cutting aid budgets and foreign investors are seeking safe havens
in the stormy global economy. Tellingly, no one has called for a
"Marshall Plan for Zimbabwe."
Further, most
factors that often generate Western political will for engagement
are absent. Neither the MDC nor ZANU-PF consorts with global terrorists,
and a collapse of the unity government will not lead to jihadi training
camps in rural areas. Zimbabwe is neither a supplier nor a major
trafficker in illegal drugs, arms or persons. Zimbabwean refugees
are not flooding into Western Europe or the United States. While
rich in natural resources, Zimbabwe seems to have the wrong commodities
at the wrong time: it has no oil, and most of its minerals face
free-falling global demand. There are no exotic diseases that threaten
pandemic: just run-of-the-mill cholera, malaria and HIV/AIDS. The
country straddles no sea lanes and has no pirates.
So as Afghanistan,
Burma, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, and other
crises are filling the in-boxes of Western policy-makers, Zimbabwe
falls to the back of line, not just alphabetically. Even international
crises themselves are slipping down the agenda in a world increasingly
focused on domestic implications of global recession.
In this context,
there is no easy motivation to compel international engagement.
While the scale of suffering in Zimbabwe matches or even dwarves
that of other humanitarian crises - with six million people
with limited or no access to safe water and sanitation, 1.5 million
children in need of assistance to attend school, and millions in
need of direct food aid - this rationale only takes us so
far in a world facing seemingly infinite humanitarian needs.
The argument
for engagement has to be built on circumstantial evidence, but it
is a strong case nonetheless.
Start with Zimbabwe-s
regional importance. If Zimbabwe is a smallish country of 12 million
people, the southern African region - with a market of 200
million, growing oil production, armed forces providing peacekeepers
throughout Africa, and a location along key shipping lanes -
is by contrast of great strategic, commercial and political importance.
A prosperous Zimbabwe could be an engine of growth for the region,
providing key links to regional communications, transport and electricity
grids. Zimbabwe has long been considered a potential breadbasket
for the region, based on what used to be efficient agriculture,
albeit in need of serious land reform. Combine this with abundant
mineral resources, hydro-electrical power to complement coal-fired
power further south, and an educated and productive labor force,
and the case for integration becomes even stronger.
By contrast,
instability in Zimbabwe is profoundly destabilizing to its neighbors.
An estimated four million Zimbabweans fleeing economic hardship
and political abuses have flooded across borders, overwhelming the
social services and the good will of South Africa, Botswana, and
other neighbors. The fierce xenophobic attacks on Zimbabweans in
South Africa-s townships are just one sign of growing restiveness.
Botswana, Africa-s shining star of stability and human rights,
has built an electrified fence and resorted to detention and expulsions
to keep desperate Zimbabweans out.
A second argument
for Western engagement is based on the world-s need for success
stories in national reconciliation based on dialogue and rule of
law. This is exactly what Zimbabwe is offering. The General Political
Accord guiding the unity government is a textbook example of how
to rebuild a post-conflict political and economic system: rebalance
power between judicial, legislative and executive powers; adopt
an inclusive constitution prepared through broad public consultations;
defang and reform a menacing security force; eliminate oppressive
security legislation; insist on accountability for past abuses;
and reinforce civil society enfeebled by Mugabe-s divide-and-rule
tactics. Success in Zimbabwe could provide lessons and ripple effects,
just as South Africa-s own transition did 15 years ago.
Third, we cannot
assume, just because the global effects of Zimbabwe-s implosion
have been modest, that "it cannot happen here." A world
focused on only the visible threats of the last crisis is no longer
creatively addressing the unpredictable effects of the next crisis.
Transnational threats incubate in unexpected ways in the hothouse
of instability and weak governance.
What if the
H1N1 virus had emerged in Harare and swept through a country where
the health infrastructure had been ravaged? Similarly, who would
have anticipated that failing states in West Africa would be the
new transit point for South American drugs going to Western Europe
or that dirt-poor North Korea would develop the technology to launch
missiles over Japan and verbally threaten the world with nuclear
attack?
Finally, the
most nuanced argument for engagement may be the most powerful. For
Western countries and particularly the United States, the capacity
to exercise so-called "soft power" depends in large
part on a global perception that this power is intended for the
global good. For most of the past decade, this has been absent.
It has been a long time since Jean-Marie Colombani summed up the
global mood on September 13, 2001, with the Le Monde headline, "Nous
Sommes Tous Américains."
The world-s
reaction to the election of Barack Obama suggests that America is
being given a second chance.
Immediately
following 9/11, I said in a speech: "We ignore suffering and
instability abroad at our peril. We must dedicate ourselves and
our resources to fight poverty, illiteracy, disease, hunger, and
repression - conditions that give rise to desperation that
translates itself into terrorist acts. We must not squander the
reservoir of resolve abroad ready to work with us in pursuit of
a more secure, more democratic, and more prosperous world."
Squander is
exactly what America did with international goodwill since 2001.
By contrast, in part because there are so few compelling national
interests in rebuilding Zimbabwe, the impact of a substantial commitment
to meet that challenge would be all the more empowering.
* Donald
Steinberg, Deputy President for Policy at International Crisis Group,
served as President Clinton-s Special Assistant for Africa
and as Director of the State Department-s Joint Policy Council
under Secretary Powell.
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