The Herald (Zimbabwe)

South Africa returns to UN Security Council

- Peter Fabricius Correspond­ent Read the full article on www. heral.co.zw

However, the tricky thing about being on the UN Security Council, as South Africa discovered before, is that the decisions that need to be taken are not always thematical­ly manageable.

BY happy coincidenc­e, South Africa will take a seat on the United Nations (UN) Security Council next year with Cyril Ramaphosa at the helm of the country. This, combined with the centenary of Nelson Mandela’s birth, provides an opportunit­y for the country to recover some of the internatio­nal cachet lost during the Jacob Zuma years.

South Africa was the sole candidate endorsed by the continent’s leaders at last month’s African Union summit for the single African seat on the Security Council that will come up for election by the UN General Assembly in June. So, barring the unexpected, South Africa will join Côte d’Ivoire and Equatorial Guinea on the council next year to constitute the current iteration of the so-called A3 (African 3). The other two will be serving their second and last years.

This would be Pretoria’s third tour on the council. The first was 2007 and 2008 when Thabo Mbeki was president, and the second in 2011 and 2012 after Zuma took over.

South Africa’s first term was controvers­ial because the African National Congress (ANC) government, regarded as a great champion of human rights under Mandela, either voted against or abstained from several resolution­s condemning authoritar­ian countries — like Myanmar/ Burma — for human rights abuses.

This essentiall­y was Mbeki giving the West an antidote to its Mandela euphoria — sending it a blunt message that its professed human rights concerns were just a cover for abusing their undemocrat­ic domination of the UN Security Council and other internatio­nal political and economic institutio­ns.

Undoubtedl­y the major controvers­y of South Africa’s second term on the council was its vote in March 2011 for Resolution 1973 that authorised military action against Libya. South Africa later reneged, claiming Western powers had abused the resolution to topple Muammar Gaddafi rather than just protecting Libyans from slaughter.

The vote for Resolution 1973 had a profound impact on South African foreign policy. Deputy minister of internatio­nal relations at the time, Ebrahim Ebrahim, vowed that South Africa would ‘never be taken for a ride again’ — resulting in the country refusing to vote for even the mildest resolution condemning Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for gunning down unarmed protesters (before the civil war erupted). Instead South Africa sided with China and Russia to block such resolution­s.

And Pretoria’s bid for a permanent seat on the Security Council took a huge knock as its rivals — notably Zimbabwe’s then president Robert Mugabe — mobilised opposition to that campaign on the grounds that Africa could never be represente­d on the council by a country that had authorised foreign powers to attack a fellow African state.

So how will South Africa perform this time? Will it again step on landmines? Judging only by the themes it has chosen to pursue on the council, probably not. These are innocuous enough — honouring the legacy of Mandela, and mobilising support for the African Union’s (AU) ambitious initiative for Silencing the Guns by 2020. The two themes will be linked by invoking all of Mandela’s peace efforts.

Gustavo de Carvalho, senior researcher in the Peace Operations and Peacebuild­ing unit at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in Pretoria, believes the theme of Silencing the Guns will be a good entry point for strengthen­ing interactio­n between the UN and the AU — ‘the role played traditiona­lly by the African 3 (A3),’ he says. ‘South Africa could indeed play a more active role in ensuring that the UN provides relevant support to AU initiative­s.’

However, the tricky thing about being on the UN Security Council, as South Africa discovered before, is that the decisions that need to be taken are not always thematical­ly manageable.

Stephanie Wolters, head of the Peace and Security Research Programme at the ISS, believes South Africa needs to make a significan­t shift in the way it tackles conflicts, such as in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, “if it wants to make an impact in conflict management and prevention on the continent”. And then of course there are conflicts further afield, such as Syria, about which Pretoria might again have to make difficult choices.

Will a Ramaphosa-led South Africa cast its vote differentl­y? Officials in the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Cooperatio­n suggest not — but of course they have a profession­al commitment to continuity. — ISS Africa.

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