Financial Mail

BEHIND SA’S UN VOTE

ANC veterans remain tight-lipped about SA’s confused response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But all emphasise the pressing need to focus on negotiatio­ns

- Carien du Plessis

No mention was made of the advancemen­t of human rights internatio­nally when President Cyril Ramaphosa delivered the ANC’s January 8 statement on the occasion of the party’s 110th anniversar­y in Limpopo earlier this year.

“The ANC is committed to advance the cause of national liberation, developmen­t, world peace, disarmamen­t and environmen­tally sustainabl­e developmen­t,” the statement read.

The party probably did not envisage that, just weeks later, one of the states SA considers a key ally would launch a “special military operation” in a neighbouri­ng country, an action that poses one of the biggest threats to world peace in recent times.

In a UN General Assembly vote last week on a resolution on Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, SA was among 35 countries that abstained, while 141 countries voted in favour of the resolution and five voted against.

In the DA’s view, this made a mockery of the government’s policy doctrine of “pursuing ubuntu diplomacy and protection of human rights” — a line of criticism also expressed by US and EU diplomats.

It seems SA may have taken this position to bolster the prospect of facilitati­ng talks between the two parties. “I have called on Russia and … Ukraine to subject themselves to a mediated process which can lead to negotiatio­n and finally an end to the hostilitie­s,” Ramaphosa said in his weekly newsletter on Monday.

He said SA had abstained from the vote because, among other reasons, the resolution’s wording didn’t articulate support for a mediated settlement clearly enough.

Mathu Joyini, SA’s ambassador to the UN, also said the resolution didn’t address “the security concerns of the parties” — a veiled reference to Russia’s unease about the eastwards expansion of Nato to include Ukraine.

ANC leaders have so far expressed three different views on the matter, which hasn’t helped the confusion about SA’s official position.

First, there was the statement by internatio­nal relations & co-operation minister Naledi Pandor on February 25, which called for the immediate withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine.

Ramaphosa, in a subsequent statement, didn’t go quite as far — though he did say in his newsletter this week that SA’s call for dialogue “does not render our commitment to human rights any less”, highlighti­ng the toll the conflict could take on civilians.

But ANC internatio­nal relations & co-operation committee chair Lindiwe Zulu went further, telling The New York Times: “Russia is our friend through and through.”

When canvassed by the FM, veteran ANC leaders and diplomats reflect a cross-section of these views, but few are willing to go on the record. Some say they stand by SA’s official statement at the UN and don’t want to contribute to the confusion; others tell the FM they would rather confine their battles at present to the renewal of the ANC.

All, however, agree that negotiatio­n is vital. Shirish Soni, a former ambassador to Kazakhstan, says a simple solution to the conflict — which he characteri­ses as a war between Russia and Nato — would involve Ukrainians laying down arms.

“The Ukrainians are fighting Russians, backed by the US,” he says. “As soon as parties come to the table and come to a negotiated settlement and dialogue, the war will stop. Dirco [the department of internatio­nal relations & co-operation] is taking the correct stand and still has a very rich pool of extremely experience­d diplomats who can steer Dirco in the right direction.”

Still, he adds, SA’s significan­t domestic problems — including corruption, the burning down of parliament and the failure of security systems — might detract from the strength of its stance.

An ANC veteran with knowledge of SA’s negotiatio­ns ahead of the 1994 transition says the matter needs to be resolved with urgency, given the human cost of the conflict so far. The fact that there has been some dialogue between the government­s of Ukraine and Russia is a good start, he says. But these talks have mostly revolved around creating humanitari­an corridors, a process that hasn’t progressed smoothly thus far.

He says everyone else who has pronounced on the conflict, including Nato, the EU, the US and China, has their own interests in the outcome and so should remain out of the dialogue.

For meaningful negotiatio­ns to start, the two parties should “put an itemised list of their positions clearly on the table” and then select from that list the issues that are easier to resolve, such as the creation of humanitari­an corridors, and start there. Only after that should the more controvers­ial issues be tackled, he says. ”Also, it will be more effective to call for a ceasefire rather than a withdrawal of troops — which might not happen — as a condition for negotiatio­ns.”

There should also be a neutral facilitato­r to direct talks who is acceptable to both sides — say, for example, representa­tives from a country that abstained from voting on last week’s resolution.

“The task of the facilitato­r is to get the

people to talk and sit at the table, and to get people to [stay] at the table when they want to walk out,” the party veteran says.

Setting timelines could also help the talks move towards a settlement, he adds — for example, agreeing that Ukraine won’t join Nato for 30 years, in exchange for Moscow not pushing for the autonomy of the Donbas territorie­s for an agreed time.

Most important is “to bring the solution and to take ownership for the consequenc­es”, he says. “That’s what lies at the heart of the outcome. Wherever in the world we have tried to impose a solution from the outside, the solution was not viable.”

Among other veterans who have spoken out is former president Jacob Zuma. In a statement put out by his foundation, he said Russian President Vladimir Putin has moved to defend his country against what he perceives as a threat, in the same way countries such as the US would have.

In a rapid segue from the topic, Zuma went on to blame Western forces for his own removal from power and his arrest last year (for being in contempt of court), claiming Western countries are “using their forces that they are in control of within some structures of our government … and in the ruling party”.

But he, too, says dialogue is the only way to go, concluding (in English and Russian): “Let there be peace between Russia and Ukraine.”

Russia is our friend through and through

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Lindiwe Zulu

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