WHO IS ONSIDE ON IVORY COAST DEADLOCK?

The editorial piece which appeared on Sunday Independent’s edition of the 09th 
January 2011 under the title “Mbeki offside over Ivory Coast deadlock” refers. 
The views stated in the said editorial are widely held in white and foreign 
privately owned media groups that controls majority of print media in this 
country. These views have been very economic with the truth such that their 
conduct simply borders on duplicity and dangerous mischief.  
 
The use of force promoted by the Sunday Independent will only hurt poor African 
masses in that part of the world and in the neighboring African states which 
shares the borders with Cote d’Ivoire.  This new found bloodthirstiness of the 
Sunday Independent is course for concern not only because it propagates 
genocide but because it ignores basic facts on the situation in Cote d’Ivoire 
just so they can build a case against Laurent Gbagbo to settle a neocolonial 
vendetta. 
 
I say new found bloodthirstiness because, to my recollection, the Sunday 
Independent has never called for military force to be used against Israel over 
the genocide going on for decades in Occupied Palestine or the US over their 
continued illegal occupation and murderous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan or King 
Mswati of Swaziland’s repressive absolute Monarch, to say the least.  Does 
democracy not matter to citizens of these countries?
 
The Constitution of Cote d’Ivoire, from which all democratic institutions and 
processes in that country flows from, was voted and adopted in a popular 
referendum by the people of Cote d’Ivoire themselves and is therefore a product 
of a direct democratic vote.  The elections were possible thanks to this 
constitution. The legislative framework for the elections is also premised on 
this popular constitution. 
 
The constitutional and legal framework in that country should be embraced as a 
whole and not half-heartedly, for if we are to analyze the elections stand off 
objectively…with integrity, and provide a workable and legitimate solution to 
the impasse, we must have regard to the existing overall constitutional and 
legal framework. Elections were held in that country because it is a democratic 
state otherwise there would not have been elections there or at least some 
popular candidates would have been frustrated to give advantage to the 
incumbent president.  
 
Participation in the elections also meant that all parties committed themselves 
to oblige by all laws governing elections in the country through to the end. 
These laws include an elections appeal process where a candidate can file a 
dispute over election results with the Constitutional Council which makes a 
final decision on the dispute and declares the final results. This is exactly 
what happened and this mechanism is in no way less democratic and legitimate 
than the primary election machinery which produced the initial election results 
which are susceptible to appeal.  
 
The decision of the Electoral Commission was legitimate but now has been 
reviewed, set aside and replaced by another legitimate and superior decision of 
the Constitutional Council within the ambit of the law. That is the whole point 
of the rule of law, isn’t? So in the circumstances do we stand for 
constitutional democracy or anarchy? Where is honour and integrity or does this 
matter in Sunday Independent’s world? 
 
The Constitutional Council is allegedly made up of Gbagbo’s appointees, we are 
told. Is it about personalities or the institution? Should we ask who appointed 
the electoral commission in Cote d’Ivoire before we take a stand on its 
pronouncements? I suppose the Electoral Commission would also have been branded 
evil had it pronounced differently. So what do you stand for Sunday 
Independent? 
 
There is value in separating principles from personalities. Principles are 
constant while personalities are a different cattle of fish so to speak. The 
Constitutional Council may make your day one day, fair and square regardless of 
who sits there, just like the Electoral commission did. Should we ask who pays 
the salary of the Sunday Independent Editor every month before we read its 
editorial and should we automatically conclude that the Editor always pander to 
the whims of the paymaster?
 
We are also told that about 200 people have died so far. But the question is: 
Who killed who? Under what circumstances? Who are these deceased persons? Are 
they soldiers or civilians? Where in the standoff do they belong? It makes a 
big difference to clarify these questions otherwise the misleading impression 
is deliberately created that every single person who dies is a victim of Cote 
d’Ivoire’s army on rampage, at the behest of Laurent Gbagbo. It is utter 
nonsense to suggest that in a warlike situation, casualties only befall one 
side of the warring parties.  There is also no mystery in soldiers dying in a 
combat situation. It is inherent in the nature of their work. 
 
The alleged 200 deaths will be a drop in the ocean if Sunday Independent’s wish 
of force against Gbagbo were to find its way.  This is Mbeki’s point which 
Sunday Independent is opposed to but controversially supporting a full scale 
war in the region which will potentially displace and kill several thousands of 
people. Intellectual promiscuity of this kind really lowers the revered 
standards of journalism. The simple question is does Sunday Independent stand 
for saving lives or destroying lives? 
 
May I also say that the UN with its exclusive and minority veto rights is not 
the bearer of righteousness, justice, fairness and equality? The AU is out of 
order for turning a blind eye to the constitutional and legal dispensation in 
Cote d’Ivoire.  We cannot follow our gut feel or improvise a solution were the 
law is explicit, clear and precise on what should happen under a given 
situation. The UN, EU and the AU have no business pronouncing themselves in 
contempt of the legal prescripts of Cote d’Ivoire and so is the Sunday 
Independent. 
 
However because the UN has engineered and fuelled a dangerous standoff and 
escalated tensions in Cote d’Ivoire, it is unrealistic to simply insist on 
upholding the rule of law. Let’s therefore support political efforts to resolve 
the impasse peacefully without any further drop of the African blood.  Enough 
is enough. Our country will be better off without people who wish to see more 
African blood spilled to further imperialist interests. The people of Cote 
d’Ivoire are our own flesh and blood. 
 
By Hulisani Mmbara 
 
(First appeared on the facebook group “Friends of Cote d’Ivoire”) 
                                          

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