The Robert Mugabe defense fund begins to splinter
AFP/Getty Images The long and disgraceful African silence on Robert Mugabe may finally be ending. For years now, Mugabe’s friends and neighbors have kept quiet as the aging and increasingly unhinged leader drove his country into the ground. Africa’s leaders often deployed tired anticolonialist rhetoric to defend him from criticism by Western watchdog groups. But ...
AFP/Getty Images
The long and disgraceful African silence on Robert Mugabe may finally be ending. For years now, Mugabe’s friends and neighbors have kept quiet as the aging and increasingly unhinged leader drove his country into the ground. Africa’s leaders often deployed tired anticolonialist rhetoric to defend him from criticism by Western watchdog groups. But Mugabe’s latest depredations may have finally exhausted African patience—or at least embarrassed his colleagues sufficiently to speak out. Zambia’s president broke the silence last week when he compared Zimbabwe to the Titanic.
Today’s news may prompt more defections. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, still recovering from the wounds inflicted by Mugabe’s security service, has just been arrested. South Africa’s stance will be critical. The government of Thabo Mbeki has long favored what he terms “quiet diplomacy” in dealing with Mugabe, and officials have bristled at criticism.
It is not our intention to make militant statements to make us feel good, or to satisfy governments outside the African continent,” Pahad told a regular news briefing in Pretoria amid the growing political crisis in neighboring Zimbabwe.
Today’s emergency meeting of the Southern Africa Development Community will give South Africa a chance to reconsider its stance.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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