NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Commonweal­th: Let’s not take chances

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SPEAKING at the National Sports Stadium to mark Zimbabwe’s 24th independen­ce anniversar­y on April 18, 2004 and four months after the southern African nation withdrew from the Commonweal­th of Nations after it had been suspended over human rights issues, the late former President Robert Mugabe emphatical­ly declared: “We shall never go back to this evil organisati­on (Commonweal­th).”

Mugabe told the world that the country had left the Commonweal­th because its former colonial master, Britain, was attempting to “enslave us, to make us puppets… When we left we did not say we shall return, the door through which we left is now locked”.

How things have changed with the passage of time and almost 20 years since Zimbabwe exited the Commonweal­th, the country is now somewhat eager to be readmitted following concerted efforts by Mugabe’s predecesso­r President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

It is interestin­g how history keeps repeating itself.

When Zimbabwe was still Rhodesia and led then by Ian Smith as prime minister, the country left the Commonweal­th in 1965 when Smith made the infamous Unilateral Declaratio­n of Independen­ce from Britain.

The country was in the wilderness for 15 years and only returned to the Commonweal­th family at independen­ce in 1980.

Now a team from the Commonweal­th is in the country, albeit for the third time, to assess the possibilit­y of Zimbabwe rejoining the 54-member organisati­on and unlike its return in 1980, this time around Zimbabwe has to prove that it is committed to upholding certain principles which it breached leading to its suspension in the first place.

Incidental­ly, the country was suspended in late 2003 for breaching a declaratio­n it signed in its capital Harare in 1991. The Harare Declaratio­n stated, among other central issues, that Zimbabwe — together with other Commonweal­th members — promote: Democracy; democratic processes and institutio­ns; the rule of law and the independen­ce of the Judiciary; just and honest governance; and fundamenta­l human rights, including equal rights and opportunit­ies for all citizens regardless of race, colour, creed or political affiliatio­n.

And based on this very declaratio­n the Commonweal­th team will assess the country’s current position before making its recommenda­tions.

While we sincerely hope for a positive outcome for the country because it has been really cold outside the Commonweal­th and the experience has not been pleasant, we implore our government to be sincere in its decision to rejoin the organisati­on.

As it is, to be honest, the way government has been behaving leaves a lot to be desired and there has been very little evidence that the country is serious about readmissio­n.

The Commonweal­th team has come at a very opportune time as we prepare for the 2023 elections. Disregardi­ng whatever has happened in the past, it is critical that our government judiciousl­y navigates the period up to the elections and what happens soon after the elections because this will, whether some of us like it or not, determine the country’s chances of returning to the Commonweal­th. A free and fair election, devoid of intimidati­on and many other electoral malpractic­es, will definitely enhance Zimbabwe’s readmissio­n chances.

Zimbabwe has been out in the cold for a long time and it should not mess up this chance, otherwise it risks being condemned back into the wilderness of pariah States.

The release of some political prisoners who were being denied bail for the past four months is a good start and we honestly hope that this is not being done just to please the visiting Commonweal­th team because there are so many other misdemeano­urs that are sticking out like sore thumbs which can easily jeopardise Zimbabwe’s chances of returning to the Commonweal­th.

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