Former Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano is among 40 prominent African personalities who have signed an open letter calling for an end to the current political violence in Zimbabwe, and for a free and fair second round of that country’s presidential election.
The letter was published as a full page advertisement on Friday in several publications including the Financial Times of London and Business Day of South Africa.
According to the letter signatories were deeply troubled by the current reports of intimidation, harassment and violence and that it was vital that the appropriate conditions are created so that the Presidential run-off is conducted in a peaceful, free and fair manner. ”Only then can the political parties conduct their election campaigning in a way that enables the citizens to express freely their political will”.
The signatories call, not only for an immediate end to violence, but for the restoration of full access for humanitarian aid agencies. The regime of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has shut down the operations of international NGOs, even though an estimated four million Zimbabweans (almost a third of the entire population) are in need of food aid.
It is feared that, by concentrating distribution of food aid in its own hands, the regime plans to use food as a weapon against opposition voters.
The Mozambican State Agency AIM reports that the letter also calls for an adequate number of independent electoral observers, both during the election process and to verify the results but Mugabe’s government has banned most independent organisations, including the Commonwealth, the Carter Centre and even the SADC (Southern African Development Community) Parliamentary Forum, from observing the elections.
The letter states that Zimbabweans fought for liberation in order to be able to determine their own future. Great sacrifices were made during the liberation struggle. To live up to the aspirations of those who sacrificed, it is vital that nothing is done to deny the legitimate expression of the will of the people of Zimbabwe. This is a clear rejection of the regime’s claim that only the ruling ZANU-PF can claim the mantle of the liberation struggle and represent the will of the people.
Chissano’s signing of this letter is of considerable significance, since in the past he has been very close to Mugabe (and was Mugabe’s best man at his marriage to his second wife, Grace. Chissano has been most reluctant to criticise Mugabe, and the fact that he put his name to this letter shows that there are very few figures of any stature left on the international stage who are prepared to support Mugabe’s current behaviour.
A second Mozambican signatory is Graca Machel, the wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela, and widow of Mozambique’s first President, Samora Machel. Without Machel’s commitment to the Zimbabwean liberation struggle, allowing ZANU to operate from Mozambican soil, it is rather unlikely that Mugabe would ever have attained power.
Other signatories to the letter include the two former United Nations General Secretaries from Africa, Kofi Annan and Boutros Ghali, and Nobel laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Wangari Maathai of Kenya.
17 former heads of state and government signed the letter – several of them from SADC and thus well known to Mugabe. They include former Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, two former Tanzanian Presidents, Ali Hassan Mwinyi and Benjamin Mkapa, and two former Botswana Presidents, Quett Masire and Festus Mogae,
Signatories from the arts include world-renowned Senegalese musician Youssou N’dour. The man who is arguably the most powerful trade unionist in Africa, Zwelinzima Vavi, the General Secretary of the South African Congress of Trade Unions (COSATU) also signed the letter.
The letter was published on the same day that Botswana became the first SADC member to publicly condemn the crackdown against leaders of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The Botswanan Foreign Minister, Phandu Sekelemani, summoned the Zimbabwean Ambassador to Gaberone, Thomas Mandigora, to warn him that Thursday’s detention of MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai while he was campaigning and the arrest of MDC general secretary Tendai Biti on treason charges were ‘unacceptable’.
”Botswana is alarmed by these arrests and detentions as they disrupt electoral activities of key players and intimidate the electorate, thus undermining the process of holding a free, fair and democratic election,’ Sekelemani said in a statement. “We are deeply disturbed by this unfolding situation of politically motivated arrests and intolerance which pose a serious threat to an outcome that reflects the will of the people of Zimbabwe”.
ZANIS/AIM/ENDS