Tyehimba
Tyehimba
Posts: 1788
RastafariSpeaks
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« on: December 01, 2003, 12:42:18 PM » |
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Obasanjo openly snubbing African solidarity By William G. Nhara
The decision by the President of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo, not to invite Zimbabwe to next week’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting is regrettable.
That decision puts to question Nigeria’s foreign policy, as having the defence of African interests, as one of its main pillars.
In January 1960, Nigerian Prime Minister, Tafawa Balewa, affirmed that, "Nigeria will have a wonderful opportunity to speak for the continent of Africa". Numerous pronouncements of Nigerian leaders over the decades appear to point to Nigeria’s consistent articulation of the interests and aspirations of the weak nations; national self-determination, non-intervention, collective security, the peaceful settlement of disputes, the juridical sovereign equality of all nations and racial equality are salient principles and issue areas in which Nigeria has demonstrated intense persistent interest and concern.
Given Nigeria’s history, how are we to judge President Obasanjo. Is Obasanjo to go into Nigeria’s annuls as a president who played to the whims of the West. Obasanjo’s decision on Zimbabwe and his voltaire face on his prisoner Charles Taylor comes at a time when Nigeria is seeking World Bank and IMF support for its national development and what better bargaining tool than to deliver the scalps of the two. One is left to wonder whether Obasanjo is a double dealer in typical West African style or an imperialist tool at the hands of the West.
In as much as Nigeria will be prepared to go to war over its oil, one would have thought that Nigeria would have understood that the issue at hand in the white Commonwealth’s fight against Zimbabwe is nothing more than Zimbabwe’s assertion over its land. When is one greater than two and when is a majority less than a minority? The answer to these questions is when the one and minority is white and when white interests are at stake. The issues over rule of law, democracy and good governance are nothing but a smokescreen of the real issues.
How does Howard "the Coward" explain his treatment of Aborigines in Australia and the gross violation of human rights in New Zealand where the Maoris are not allowed to walk the streets after midnight. How does one explain the fact that President Obasanjo is presiding over the same Commonwealth that recently pronounced Nigeria’s elections to have failed to meet that body’s "standards"? Obasanjo lashed out at the West for failing to understand the notions of democracy, saying "Nigeria is Nigeria and standards differ".
After Obasanjo’s bark even President Bush kept quite. Speaking of unflinching African solidarity, one is brought to remember that in October 1995, Nigerian military ruler, General Abacha, had intended to put Obasanjo to the gallows. It took the stature of President Mugabe as head of an OAU troika, to convince Abacha to spare Obasanjo — for me that is African solidarity.
I find it baffling that the Commonwealth is failing to give Zimbabwe room and an opportunity to present its case. It is very clear that the Commonwealth observer group to Zimbabwe’s elections had an over representation of observers from Australia, Canada and New Zealand. These countries had already declared, in advance, the elections as not being "free and fair" and were already campaigning for Zimbabwe’s suspension from the Commonwealth.
The decision to exclude Zimbabwe from Abuja sets a very dangerous precedent, which must be opposed in the interests of integrity and internal cohesion of the Commonwealth. It has become acceptable that the British Government has brought Zimbabwe to its current predicament by reneging on its historical colonial obligations. Zimbabwe’s land reform programme is now history and the country should be allowed to forge with its developmental efforts. Zimbabwe should be allowed to chart is destiny. Zimbabwe should be allowed to be Zimbabwe again.
What is clear from the current goings on is the fact that the Commonwealth does not stand for the interests of justice and equity.
It does not stand for development and empowerment of the majority. It is a paternalistic organisation of the British and its cousins. One would tend to agree with the general public feeling that the Commonwealth is no longer very relevant in today’s diplomacy for Zimbabwe, the future of Zimbabwe’s engagement in the organisation is relatively easy to ascertain.
For those member countries that are not inhabited by people of British descent, the Commonwealth is no more than an imperial junkyard bordered by strong, almost invisible, silken threads from which it will take more than the normal political courage and will power left in the breasts of the mentally emasculated and suitably educationally conditioned mind of the ex-colonial man to escape.
It is only by deliberately deciding to leave the Commonwealth can we begin to recreate the political clan with which to move forward under our own steam. One tends to believe that the significance of history, language and colonial sentiments are greatly exaggerated and no longer relevant to development problems. Perhaps it is time Zimbabwe says good bye to the Commonwealth.
There are others who are of the feeling that an active prominent participation in the Commonwealth does not and will not constitute a liability to Zimbabwe.
They argue that Zimbabwe stands to benefit economically and especially through technical assistance through the Commonwealth Fund for Technical Co-operation. They argue further that participation in such organisations can provide an invaluable forum for the examination of common interests and goals and provide collective solutions to problems.
In the absence of direct and substantial interests, it seems probable that Zimbabwe will seek a policy of association rather than isolation, if only to augment its influence in the international arena.
In the absence of an invitation to Abuja, Zimbabwe should use the civic and academic society to help sell the Zimbabwean story outside the halls of the Councils of the Commonwealth.
Nigeria, when it was in the same predicament as Zimbabwe, employed aggressive rebuffs to the Commonwealth and agents of the West. I believe that sanity will prevail as Zimbabwe prepares for the 2005 General Elections. I believe that there is life after Abuja.
l The author is the executive director of the Southern African Institute for Democracy and Good Governance.
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