NO SANCTIONS ON MUGABE, SAYS JACOB ZUMA

There is a lot of mistaken belief in Zimbabwe that when Jacob Zuma becomes president of South Africa, he will be harder on Mugabe. This belief  is premised on the fact that COSATU and the South African Communist Party (COSATU), which are largely responsible for mobilising support for Zuma to get the presidency of  the ANC, are both vehemently against Mugabe's regime. The MDC and a lot of people in Zimbabwe have now staked the life of the democratic project in Zimbabwe on this flawed thinking. Now, from the horse's mouth, from Zuma himself, we hear that he has no intention of doing any such thing. Sanctions are out. Below is the article that appeared in the Wall Street Journal yesterday. We should stop looking to outside interests to solve our problem. ONce we do that, we will find that local solutions come easily, the suffering of people will end in a heartbeat.

Down with Mugabe and his murderers!!!!


FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

NEW YORK -- South Africa will stay the course on its longstanding diplomatic policy with Zimbabwe, Jacob Zuma, president of South Africa's ruling African National Congress party, said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal Friday.

[Zuma, Jacob]

JACOB ZUMA

Mr. Zuma, the likely next president of the country, also said South Africa will maintain its fiscally disciplined policies despite the credit crisis and the weakening global economy.

Endorsing his party's approach on Zimbabwe, Mr. Zuma ruled out sanctions, arguing that the South African-brokered power-sharing deal agreed to last month by Zimbabwe's ruling and main opposition parties is the only viable plan. Longtime leader Robert Mugabe is to share power with opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai. Mr. Mugabe has thrown the deal into jeopardy by asserting control over ministries that handle defense, internal security and the media.

Mr. Zuma said South Africa would try to persuade Mr. Mugabe to make the deal work, and noted the agreement has been endorsed by the international community. He said that when he met President George W. Bush informally earlier this week, "He was even saying, 'We are ready to lift the sanctions, let us ensure that this package works.' Because nobody can produce, at this point in time, a better plan."

In a written response to the Journal, a White House spokesman acknowledged the meeting and said the U.S. is prepared to lift sanctions once Zimbabwe has "a government that represents the will of the people."

Noting that more than three million Zimbabweans have fled Zimbabwe's political and economic meltdown and settled in South Africa, Mr. Zuma and top advisers who accompanied him in the interview stressed that sanctions would likely inflame the crisis and increase the flood of refugees. Zimbabwe faces massive food shortages, and this year its official inflation rate topped 230 million percent.

Mr. Mugabe has retained the presidency through a brutal campaign of violence and intimidation and suppression of the press. While South Africa is Zimbabwe's largest trading partner in the region, the ANC leaders ruled out unilateral action or "bully-boy" steps, as ANC Treasurer General Matthews Phosa put it. The ANC leaders contrasted their collaborative approach with that of U.S. international policy in Iraq and elsewhere, which Mr. Phosa described as "arrogant."

"So stand back. Allow Africans to resolve this issue. We're almost at the door now" of making the power-sharing deal work, Mr. Phosa said.

Since taking the reins of the ANC last December, Mr. Zuma, who is widely regarded as the standard-bearer of the ANC's left wing, has been taking pains to assure international business and political leaders that South Africa's business-friendly policies will remain the same. However, many South African commentators interpreted a recent economic summit of the ANC and its allies as foretelling a leftward shift.

Joking that "Nobody's checking whether [the ANC] is going to go right," Mr. Zuma said that the ANC would continue its "mixed economy" approach that combines business-friendly policies and avoidance of deficit spending with investment in social and public-works programs to try to alleviate the crushing poverty that most of the population still endures.

As head of the ANC, South Africa's heavily dominant party, Mr. Zuma is almost certain to win the presidency in elections next year. Mr. Zuma declined to say whether he would ask Finance Minister Trevor Manuel to continue in his administration, but praised his work and reiterated something Mr. Manuel recently said in a speech: that South Africa's fiscal discipline has acted as a shock absorber in the current credit crisis.

Write to Mark Schoofs at mark.schoofs@wsj.com and Nicolas Brulliard atnicolas.brulliard@dowjones.com

Comments

  1. The problem with us Zimbabweans is that we like to think we are educated, when in fact we are fools. We live our lives on conjecture, we do not analyse matters and see which course of action best saves our lives. Zuma is not our saviour. The ANC will never abandon Mugabe,COSATU and SACP notwithstanding. Let have that deal. Without it, I will have no relatives left in Zimbabwe by the end of the year. PLEASE DR MAKONI< SPEAK TO THESE IDIOTS WHO ARE TREATING US WORSE THAN DOGS. WE need a government yesterday. Tsvangirai and Mugabe must agree. I don't care what they agree on, they must just agree and form a government. We are suffering!!

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  2. Iwe siyana naMugabe. Tsvangirai is the real problem here. He must just sign.

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  3. True...we wait for other people to free us from ZANU PF..we should be our won heros not to wait for SADC, Mbeki, Bush, Brown etc. That's why most of us are saying enough is enough let's launch Mavambo & we will actively participate in the politics of our country & shape our destiny as Zimbabweans.......the time is now, the next election is not far. Simba lost not because he was not capable but because many were confused whether to trust an independant. Time is needed to convince the people well before election time.

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