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Godwin
is wrong about Zimbabwe
Blessing-Miles
Tendi
May 13, 2011
Peter Godwin wrote an article entitled "Making
Mugabe Laugh" in the International Herald Tribune on 20
April 2011. In the article Godwin claimed that the Ivory Coast under
its recently ousted President Laurent Gbagbo and Zimbabwe, led by
President Robert Mugabe, have some "striking parallels".
Godwin argues that both countries, led by highly educated presidents
or intellectual-politicians who were liberators from repressive
regimes, were once viewed as success stories in their respective
regions. These parallels are true but they are hardly striking.
Africa has and
continues to be led by many other intellectual-politicians who are
also viewed as "liberators" of some sort. President Paul
Kagame of Rwanda, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia, former
South Africa President Thabo Mbeki and Malawi President Bingu wa
Mutharika are only a few examples. Similarly Godwin's narrative
of a "success" story gone wrong can be applied to several
African countries. Moreover, when Godwin likens Gbagbo and Mugabe
by arguing that they resorted to "racist vestments of extreme
nativism" he simplifies the deeply complex and different motives
for both leaders' actions.
Godwin also
invents similarities in order to bolster his straw man argument
that the Ivory Coast and Zimbabwe bear some "striking similarities".
For instance he asserts that the "two countries have also been
similarly plagued by north-south conflicts". This is an irresponsible
distortion of history. Indeed the Ivory Coast has been deeply divided
by a north-south conflict centring on religion, among other important
factors. However, Zimbabwe has never experienced a north-south conflict
in its history.
Where the Ivory
Coast and Zimbabwe "crucially diverge", Godwin argues,
is that whereas West Africa's leading power Nigeria refused to recognize
Gbagbo after he lost the 2010 presidential election to Alassane
Ouattara, Southern Africa's leading state South Africa helped Mugabe
stay in power after he lost the 2008 election.
According to Godwin former South African president Mbeki "bullied"
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai into a power-sharing government
led by Mugabe. Such a conclusion can only be reached by someone
who has never taken the time to interview all the political actors
involved in Zimbabwe's 2008 power-sharing negotiations. Had Godwin
done this, he would know that Tsvangirai was not bullied into a
power-sharing arrangement. Negotiators to the power-sharing agreement,
including Mbeki, have all recounted to me in interviews that sharing
power was at the time the only viable solution to the 2008 political
deadlock in Zimbabwe. The terms of the power-sharing agreement were
crafted and agreed on by Zimbabwe's rival political parties - not
Mbeki as Godwin seems to believe.
I share Godwin's
criticism that power-sharing is a "democracy-defying model".
The spread of the model in recent years is a cause for concern.
But it is clear that the question of how to resolve conflict in
Africa remains extremely complex, and there may be good reasons
for thinking that in some cases the benefits outweigh the costs.
After all, power-sharing is usually justified principally in terms
of the number of lives it is likely to save in the short term. However,
in order to make accurate decisions as to when these benefits outweigh
the costs, it is essential to fully recognise the barriers that
power-sharing may create to genuine reform. Even if power-sharing
arrangements do deliver greater peace and stability in the short
term, their flaws suggest that it should only be used as a last
resort.
Godwin is wrong
when he writes that "Zimbabwe's democratic opposition has been
rewarded by the international community by being largely ignored".
By international community I presume that Godwin means the West.
Here in Britain, where I reside, Zimbabwe features in the media
frequently and it is discussed in parliament more than any other
African state. There are even combined American and European Union
targeted sanctions against Zimbabwe - something more undemocratic
and human rights violating states such as Angola, Swaziland, Equatorial
Guinea, Pakistan and Middle East states are not subject to.
The problem
with the West is that double standards on global human rights and
democracy promotion have helped Mugabe to cast and reject Western
interference as imperialism. Western double standards have become
undemocratic regimes' fall guy for their unwillingness to introduce
genuine, indigenous, workable and sovereign institutions for human
rights promotion and protection. Consequently, Godwin's call for
America to support democracy and human rights movements in Zimbabwe
is misguided. America and the West are part of the problem - not
the solution - in Zimbabwe's problems.
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