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A
regional -- and national -- embrace for Mugabe
Moyiga Nduru,
Inter Press Service (IPS)
March 30, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=37164
JOHANNESBURG,
Mar 30 (IPS) - Hopes that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe would
be taken to task this week over human rights abuses in his country
have been dashed -- this after regional leaders reaffirmed their
solidarity with Zimbabwe, and the ruling Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) endorsed Mugabe as its presidential
candidate for 2008 elections.
A special summit
of the 14-nation Southern African Development Community (SADC) also
appealed for sanctions against Zimbabwe to be lifted.
The European
Union imposed targeted sanctions on the country in 2002, and the
United States in 2003, in response to rights violations in Zimbabwe
and flawed parliamentary and presidential polls in 2000 and 2002
respectively. In its communiqué for the Mar. 28-29 summit,
SADC described the 2002 presidential election as having been "free,
fair and democratic".
In addition,
the summit communiqué called on Britain -- Zimbabwe's former
coloniser -- to honour a commitment made during independence negotiations
to help fund land reform in the country aimed at rectifying racial
imbalances in land ownership.
It also mandated
South African President Thabo Mbeki "to continue to facilitate
dialogue" between Zimbabwe's government and opposition, and
the SADC executive secretary to study the economic situation in
the country.
South Africa's
policy of quiet diplomacy towards its northern neighbour has come
under repeated attack, with critics accusing the approach of being
ineffectual.
Zimbabwe is
currently battling inflation of about 1,700 percent, widespread
unemployment and shortages of food and other basic goods -- evidence
of economic decline ascribed to government mismanagement, and a
controversial farm redistribution programme ostensibly aimed at
giving property to landless, black Zimbabweans.
Mugabe blames
Zimbabwe's economic woes on Western nations, accused of undermining
the Southern African country in response to the land reallocation
programme.
The SADC summit
also discussed the aftermath of elections in Lesotho, and violence
in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Just a day after
regional leaders wrapped up their talks in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania,
ZANU-PF agreed to hold presidential, parliamentary and local government
elections in 2008 -- backing Mugabe to lead it in the polls. The
83-year-old leader has been in power since independence in 1980.
ZANU-PF's continued
support of Mugabe Friday came despite reports of disenchantment
in party ranks at the effects of his rule, which has in recent weeks
seen another crackdown on opposition supporters that claimed the
life of an activist earlier this month.
Several others
have been hospitalised after undergoing beatings. They include Morgan
Tsvangirai -- leader of a faction in the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) -- who was assaulted when police broke up a prayer
meeting on Mar. 11.
Mugabe has accused
the MDC of staging a terror campaign to unseat him (a charge the
party denies), and portrays it as a Western puppet. Reports indicate
that nine opposition officials were charged this week in connection
with the alleged terror campaign.
In a press release
issued Wednesday, Human Rights Watch claimed that ordinary Zimbabweans
had also been affected by the latest wave of state repression.
"Witnesses
and victims from Harare's high-density suburbs of Glenview, Highfield
and Mufakose told Human Rights Watch that for the past few weeks
police forces patrolling these locations have randomly and viciously
beaten Zimbabweans in the streets, shopping malls, and in bars and
beer halls," notes the Mar. 28 document.
The New York-based
grouping had called on SADC to speak out against abuse in Zimbabwe
as well as against "the general climate of repression faced
by (its) citizens". It also wanted the region to appeal for
and participate in an independent commission of inquiry into the
latest abuses at the hands of security forces.
Ayesha Kajee,
a researcher at the Johannesburg-based South African Institute of
International Affairs who recently visited Zimbabwe, says people
there often depend for their survival on family and friends living
abroad. Economic and political hardship has caused millions of Zimbabweans
to leave for South Africa, the United Kingdom and elsewhere.
"The standard
of living has fallen among ordinary Zimbabweans. Two to five years
ago an average family would have subsisted on proper meals. People
now depend on grain and vegetables. They say they are relying on
remittances from the disaspora," she told IPS.
But, "If
people were forced to change their forex (foreign exchange) at the
official rate they would not live. They change it on the parallel
market at 40 times the official rate," Kajee added.
Remittances
will not reach everyone, however.
On Thursday
Rashid Khalikov, New York head of the United Nations Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, informed the Security
Council that harvests this year might only meet one third of Zimbabwe's
requirements. This would increase the number of people at risk of
hunger, a figure that had already reached upwards of 1.4 million
last year.
Agencies such
as the U.N. World Food Programme are already feeding the needy in
Zimbabwe.
Noted Kajee:
"People are reluctant to tell you that they rely on food aid.
But they will tell you that they know someone who relies on food
aid. Of course they have their pride and dignity to protect."
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