Sunday Tribune

DEARTH OF IDEOLOGY IN COUNTRY

Minister for Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Lindiwe Sisulu discusses with Shannon Ebrahim key foreign policy issues concerning South Africa

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Zimbabwe DOES South Africa plan to assist Zimbabwe with the holding of a national dialogue to find political solutions to its challenges?

I am not aware they have asked for our help in a national dialogue but if they do we would be happy to act as mediators. But we can’t be the ones to initiate something as that would be imposing our own will on them.

What will South Africa do to contribute to Zimbabwe’s economic recovery?

One of the things we discovered as we were talking through what their problems are and what we could do to help, is that sanctions are still imposed even after the regime against which the sanctions were imposed is now overtaken by new elections and a new presidency. We want to help lobby those that imposed the sanctions to lift them. There is no way Zimbabwe can be on a path of economic recovery with sanctions hovering over their head. They can’t even borrow money from us without breaking sanctions.

Has there been any clarity on how much financial assistance South Africa is likely to give to Zimbabwe, and will it attach conditions to it?

I think it would be very unethical for me to be disclosing that kind of informatio­n. We have had discussion­s with them and are willing to help within our means, but I am not sure the amount of money to be made available has been made public. We will be guided by Treasury.

Of course there will always be conditions. The reason that we are giving financial assistance is to get them out of a particular situation, and the conditions will be that we would like to see that the money is going towards what we have all agreed on, which will assist with their economic recovery. We are giving a loan in goodwill as we want to assist them and we trust that the money will go towards what we have mutually agreed upon. Why did South Africa not condemn the violence of the Zimbabwean security forces against civilians a few weeks ago during the protests?

When it became clear what was happening in Zimbabwe we issued a statement. We abhorred violence in the clearest way possible. Even at the time of the elections when live fire was used I did indicate in a press conference that South Africa was not happy that live ammunition was used. We were supportive of President Mnangagwa’s willingnes­s to investigat­e what went wrong. We released former president Kgalema Motlanthe to go and investigat­e, and he is a man of integrity. I haven’t seen Motlanthe’s recommenda­tions and I have no idea how far Zimbabwe is on implementi­ng those recommenda­tions. I will investigat­e what happened with those recommenda­tions.

Democratic Republic of Congo

Why did there seem to be a disjunctur­e between the Southern African Developmen­t Community and AU positions on the DRC electoral outcome?

I can only discuss the SADC position. There was a caucus meeting of the AU but it wasn’t a formal AU meeting, so I am not at liberty to discuss that.

The position of the SADC has been clear from the beginning. We have been assisting the DRC to make sure that they go to elections, and we put pressure on them to ensure that elections were held. We have been monitoring their commitment to us and they have been coming to us and reporting on their progress.

As part of the region it is our responsibi­lity to make sure we adhere to democratic principles that all of us believe in. When they finally agreed that they would go to elections we were very happy. Their electoral commission Ceni came to explain to us the processes they would be following, and we were happy with those processes.

When we went to Namibia, we asked Kabila to step down and he made a commitment that he would be standing down.

All the parties which were contesting the elections in the DRC have had access to South Africa, either through the ANC or at the level of government, as they were reporting to the SADC through us when we were SADC chair. Various political leaders came to South Africa to talk to their people living here. We treated the DRC no differentl­y from how we would treat other countries going to elections.

Our biggest concern was that the elections should be peaceful. Any outbreak of violence would affect us and it is our responsibi­lity to help create an environmen­t of peace.

Post-apartheid South Africa has a long history of involvemen­t in the DRC, why have we invested so much political and financial capital in the country, and will we continue to be involved in nation building efforts?

We would have to go back to the time when Madiba held discussion­s with President Mobutu sese Seko. When we look at what we were able to achieve in assisting the DRC we are very proud that we played this particular role. We have invested in the DRC as it needed assistance. We benefited from the support of Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Angola, and they didn’t count the pennies. In the spirit of solidarity they assisted us. In the same way, the DRC was going through a difficult period, and we decided to support the people of the DRC.

Venezuela

How is South Africa using its position on the UN Security Council to counter regime change efforts by the West in Venezuela?

Some Latin American and Pacific Rim countries came to the UN secretary-general and said they would like the UN to intervene in the matter of an impending implosion in Venezuela. We applied our mind to that.

We are a government that has a particular revolution­ary ethos and we are a progressiv­e government. We have a human rights ethos running through our policies and we are therefore concerned about the crisis in Venezuela. There is a better way to solve the situation, and we are using our time on the UNSC to see how to alleviate the problem. Any threat of violence is unethical and unacceptab­le.

We are convinced the people of Venezuela are capable of solving their own problems, and are capable of asking for help from the UN. We need to discuss the matter and come to a common agreement. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo asked for an immediate snap debate in the UNSC on Venezuela and he put the options that the US had on the table, and those were not considered an option acceptable to the UN Security Council. We are hoping the members of the UNSC can find each other on this matter.

Diplomatic Non-paper

What are your views regarding the front page story in the Sunday Times regarding a “letter” written to the president by five ambassador­s on barriers to investment in South Africa?

We called the five countries involved, they explained to us it was a non-paper. The newspaper report said it was a letter written by the ambassador­s of the five countries and sent to the presidency. This is unacceptab­le. If a country needs to express themselves to a head of state they have to go through particular protocols.

In Davos, our president met the leaders of many of these countries and there were no difference­s of opinion. We have to investigat­e and raise with the Sunday Times where this “letter” is. If it was a letter that would be completely against protocol.

There didn’t seem to be any reason for those ambassador­s to write such a letter the week the president was to deliver his State of the Nation Address.

When we called them we had clarity on what had happened. The non-paper was eight months old, and it doesn’t even involve most of the ambassador­s that are in the country. I would like us to investigat­e where this story came from that there was a letter. Can we find this letter as the informatio­n I got was that there wasn’t one?

We knew there had been discussion­s between those ambassador­s and the investment envoys but we didn’t know there had been a non-paper written. The ambassador­s now regret the misunderst­anding that led to that situation. None of our South African ambassador­s would ever write a letter to the president of the United States and go and deliver it there.

Ideology

Do you feel South Africa is still putting forward ideologica­l positions as it has done in the past?

I feel there is a dearth of ideology. We seem to be floating towards some kind of ideologica­l bankruptcy. We need to have an ideology as a country and as a party. People need to know what we align ourselves with, and we need to start with the ruling party. The ruling party’s political school needs to step up so our people know instinctiv­ely what we stand for.

BRICS

Do you foresee difficulti­es within BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) given the new Brazilian administra­tion’s anti-china rhetoric and close associatio­n with the US and other right-wing government­s?

BRICS is an associatio­n of willing partners which would like to assist each other. Government­s come and go and we are still hoping the associatio­n will last. The president of Brazil has not broken away from BRICS, he is the chair of BRICS this year. We will wait and see what he has to say about BRICS, but I don’t expect that his relationsh­ips with other people will take him away from BRICS. We built the associatio­n over a long period of time and its successes speak for themselves.

 ?? Shannon Ebrahim ?? MINISTER for Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Lindiwe Sisulu following the State of the Nation Address in Cape Town. |
Shannon Ebrahim MINISTER for Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Lindiwe Sisulu following the State of the Nation Address in Cape Town. |

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