Business Day

Sadc leaders endorse Mugabe as chairman

- MIKE COHEN

ZIMBABWEAN President Robert Mugabe yesterday became chairman of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) and he is also in line to lead the African Union from next year.

His leadership of the two regional bodies is an endorsemen­t by his fellow African leaders and an affirmatio­n of his victory in last year’s disputed elections.

Mr Mugabe, 90, took over the Sadc chairmansh­ip from Malawi’s Peter Mutharika.

“This is an endorsemen­t of the political change that has taken (place) in Zimbabwe,” said South African Institute for Internatio­nal Affairs researcher Aditi Lalbahadur. African leaders were signalling that they recognise Mr Mugabe’s “unequivoca­l winning of the election, contested as it was”.

Mr Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe since independen­ce in 1980, winning a five-year term in a July 2013 election that the main opposition party, western nations and domestic observers said was flawed. The economy’s outlook has weakened with factories closing, consumer spending coming under pressure and the government struggling to pay wages.

Zimbabwean officials were excluded from positions of power in Sadc for almost a decade, as the country grappled with economic and political turmoil. State-backed violence, mainly directed at the Movement for Democratic Change, saw western nations impose sanctions on senior ruling party officials.

ZIMBABWEAN President Robert Mugabe yesterday urged Southern Africa to reduce its dependence on foreign aid and to make better use of its natural resources such as minerals and land.

Mr Mugabe was speaking at the opening of a two-day summit of the 15-member Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) in Zimbabwe’s Victoria Falls resort.

“Our continued over-reliance on the goodwill of our co-operation partners compromise­s our ownership of Sadc,” he said.

“Our region has abundant resources that, instead of being sold in raw form at very low prices, must be exploited … to add value to the products that we export,” he said.

Mr Mugabe yesterday assumed the chairmansh­ip of the Sadc region and is also in line to lead the 54nation continenta­l body, the African Union, from 2015.

Sadc’s members are SA, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Namibia, Mozambique, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mauritius, Angola, Swaziland, Seychelles and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

His call for economic empowermen­t might find some resonance in a region that is endowed with some of the world’s largest reserves of minerals and commoditie­s yet remains among the poorest.

Critics say Mr Mugabe’s regional standing has been undermined by an economic crisis in Zimbabwe, which they partly blame on his seizures and redistribu­tion of white-owned commercial farms to landless people among the black population.

Activist groups including Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch said last week that Zimbabwe had to respect its own constituti­on if it wanted to have credibilit­y as head of Sadc.

But Aditi Lalbahadur, a researcher at the South African Institute for Internatio­nal Affairs, said: “This is an endorsemen­t of the political change that has taken charge in Zimbabwe.” African leaders were signalling they recognised Mr Mugabe’s “unequivoca­l” electoral win, Ms Lalbahadur said, “contested as it was”.

Zimbabwean officials were excluded from Sadc positions of power for almost a decade as the country grappled with economic and political turmoil. State-backed violence, mainly directed at the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, saw sanctions imposed on senior ruling-party officials.

Mr Mugabe was the only Southern African leader who was not invited to the US-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington, hosted earlier this month by US President Barack Obama.

Leaders at the regional bloc’s annual summit will discuss how to derive greater benefit from mineral resources by encouragin­g local processing. They will also assess progress made toward enhancing economic integratio­n.

Zimbabwe’s Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegw­i said they would not impose its programmes on its neighbours. “All we can give is the Zimbabwe approach. After discoverin­g foreign companies were not keen to add value, we have

Our region has abundant resources that, instead of being sold raw, must be exploited to add value

legislated an arrangemen­t where in the mining industry at least 51% … must be held by Zimbabwean­s,” Mr Mumbengegw­i said.

“In the absence of such a law, we have to ask the companies involved to invest in the beneficiat­ion of the mineral. It is a challenge and cannot be solved overnight…. With determinat­ion and concerted effort it can be done.”

Issues of migration are also expected to come up.

“Leaders are yet to find common ground on the implementa­tion of enabling legislatio­n and concrete action to establish initiative­s such as a uni-visa for the region to ease the movement of visitors across borders, and one-stop border posts to ease the passage of goods,” the South African Institute for Internatio­nal Relations said. Ray Ndlovu, Reuters, Bloomberg and AFP

 ?? Picture: EPA/SIYABULELA DUDA ?? NEW SEAT: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, Sadc’s new chairman, speaks at the Sadc summit in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, yesterday.
Picture: EPA/SIYABULELA DUDA NEW SEAT: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, Sadc’s new chairman, speaks at the Sadc summit in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, yesterday.

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