'Very little' SADC can do over Zimbabwe            Dickson Jere | 
Lusaka, Zambia                  14 August 2007 07:46                    
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  Southern African leaders will unlikely be able to find a solution to the 
meltdown in Zimbabwe at their summit meeting in Zambia later this week, and 
will probably dabble only in diplomatic matters, analysts predict.

Few expect concrete results from the Southern African Development Community 
(SADC) heads of state gathering that starts in Lusaka on Thursday, or that the 
regional bloc will alter its stance of quiet diplomacy towards the ailing state.

"SADC has no muscle, no enforcement abilities," Moeletsi Mbeki, deputy 
chairperson of the South African Institute for International Affairs, told 
Agence France-Presse.

"SADC has no power to make the Zimbabwean government do anything."

Chris Maroleng, a Zimbabwean expert at the Pretoria-based Institute for 
Security Studies, said SADC's track record showed it was unlikely to publicly 
condemn Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe or his ruling Zanu-PF.

"There is very little it can do outside some kind of diplomatic initiative."

South Africa's president Thabo Mbeki will report to the summit on his efforts 
to mediate a political stalemate between Zanu-PF and the opposition Movement 
for Democratic Change.

Fellow SADC leaders, faced with a rising flood of Zimbabwean refugees to their 
countries, mandated Mbeki in March to broker talks following a violent 
clampdown by Mugabe's government on opposition supporters.

A Zimbabwean government report last week claimed an agreement with the 
opposition may be reached soon, despite the ruling party being accused of 
thwarting mediated talks.

A Zimbabwean official has sought to downplay Zimbabwe's profile at this week's 
summit.

"This is a normal meeting of the SADC leaders, but we are aware at every summit 
there are people trying to put Zimbabwe in the spotlight," Deputy Information 
Minister Bright Matonga said at the weekend.

"We are aware of efforts by the West to divide African nations over Zimbabwe 
but the good thing is African leaders are aware of these machinations."

Plans for the ailing state's economic recovery are likely to feature at the 
summit as the country's population reels from world-record inflation and 
chronic shortages of food, fuel and other commodities.

Four out of five Zimbabweans are jobless and about 80% of the population live 
below the poverty threshold as Zimbabwe plans to import 300 000 tonnes of the 
staple maize from its neighbours and international food aid is being stepped up.

Mugabe blames his country's economic woes on drought and sanctions imposed on 
him and his ruling party elite following presidential polls dismissed as rigged 
by opposition parties and Western observers.

But critics say the problems are the result of controversial land reforms in 
which the government seized at least 4 000 farms from white commercial farmers 
for reallocation to landless blacks and state cronies.

The SADC summit will see Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa take chairmanship of 
the 14-member regional bloc, criticised by Western nations for not acting 
decisively against the Zimbabwean government. 

Mwanawasa recently broke ranks by likening Zimbabwe to a "sinking Titanic," and 
some hope he will use the chairmanship to push for a more
hardline stance against the troubled nation's leaders.

Other summit discussion points include regional economic integration, as well 
as the political situation in Lesotho and the Democratic Republic of Congo 
(DRC).

Lesotho has been rocked by political unrest since the disputed outcome of 
elections in March which saw Prime Minister Phakalita Mosisili returned to 
power for a third term.

The DRC is in the throes of transition after a devastating civil war which 
culminated in the first democratic elections in four decades last year. The 
east of the country remains unstable and opposition leader Jean-Pierre Bemba is 
in exile.

The summit will also see the launch of a long-mooted regional standby military 
force. - Sapa-AFP

       
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