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Zimbabwe, Fiji and the hypocrisy of British Commonwealth leaders
By Peter Symonds
13 March 2002
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While the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM)
is not unique among international forums in displays of cant and
hypocrisy, last weeks gathering in Coolum, Australia of
prime ministers, presidents and ministers from the countries of
the former British Empire certainly provided a graphic example.
Zimbabwe was at the top of the agenda. British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, backed by his Australian, New Zealand and Canadian
counterparts, was intent on further isolating President Robert
Mugabe for his alleged breaches of democratic rights, violence
against political opponents and the takeover of white-owned farms.
He wanted Zimbabwe suspended from the Commonwealth prior to the
countrys presidential elections last weekend and sanctions
imposed to match those of the European Union and the US.
In the event, Blair and his allies were forced to compromise.
Like Mugabe, African leaders face widespread discontent over poverty
and unemployment. They were therefore wary about being seen to
cave in to the demands of the former colonial ruler for action
against the Zimbabwean president, who has demagogically promoted
himself as a defender of poor Africans. Instead of suspending
Zimbabwe, CHOGM established a three-person panel comprising Australian
Prime Minister John Howard and two African leaders to determine
appropriate action if Commonwealth election monitors
report foul play.
The outcome provoked another round of righteous indignation.
Blair contemptuously dismissed the decision, determined by the
voting power of poorer African nations, as representing the
lowest common denominator and warned that the credibility
of the Commonwealth was at stake. New Zealand Prime Minister Helen
Clark vented her anger, declaring: Notwithstanding the evidence
of a failure to observe the fundamental principles of the Commonwealth,
a member state [Zimbabwe] is still sitting around the table.
It is true that Mugabe is guilty of thuggery and anti-democratic
practicesbut the same is also the case in a number of other
Commonwealth countries. The highly selective character of Blairs
sanctimonious crusade against Zimbabwe is all the more apparent
if one considers the silence at CHOGM on the state of political
affairs in Fiji. Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, whose administration
was initially installed by the Fijian military following the coup
attempt by businessman George Speight, was able to rub shoulders
with other Commonwealth leaders without a murmur of public criticism.
Speight and a group of elite soldiers seized the parliament
building in May 2000 and held Mahendra Chaudhrythe countrys
first ethnic Indian prime ministerand other ministers, hostage
at gunpoint for 56 days. He clearly had the sympathy, and in some
cases active support, of significant figures in the countrys
military and state bureaucracy, who, while formally disapproving
of his methods, openly embraced his racialist demands for political
and economic supremacy for ethnic Fijians.
With the government held hostage, the military top brass seized
power, abrogated the constitution and installed Qarase, a former
banker, known for his support for Speights views, as prime
minister. The new administration, backed by the military, struck
a deal with Speight to end the siege at parliament house in return
for implementing his anti-Indian agenda. Only under pressure from
Australia and New Zealand did the military finally arrest Speight
and some of those immediately involved in the coup attempt and
charge them with treason.
No one, however, including Blair, Howard, Clark or any other
Commonwealth leader, suggested that the elected government headed
by Chaudhry should be reinstalled. To provide a veneer of legitimacy
to the military-backed regime, fresh elections were finally called
last August.
The poll was just as anti-democratic as the one just concluded
in Zimbabwe. It was held under a constitution that segregates
voters on a racial basis and cedes considerable powers to the
Great Council of Chiefsan unelected body of the ethnic Fijian
elite. The campaign unfolded under tight military and police measures
and the threat of violence by gangs of racialist thugs against
ethnic Indians.
Even though Speight was under detention for treason, he was
allowed to form his own political party and run in the election.
He, Qarase and other Fijian leaders openly appealed to racialist
sentiment, calling for a vote to keep Chaudhry out of office.
The underlying threat to Indo-Fijians was: if Chaudhry and the
Fijian Labour Party won a majority, his government would be ousted
again. After all, little or no action had been taken against the
leader of the previous coupSitiveni Rabuka in 1987.
Qarases newly formed United Fiji Party was alleged to
have made substantial bribes to key sections of the electorate
but still failed to win an absolute majority. He finally formed
a coalition with Speights Conservative Alliance and prevented
Chaudhry from taking back the office he had previously won.
This whole electoral farce was witnessed by Commonwealth observer
teams who pronounced the result a credible reflection
of the will of the Fijian people. The outcome of the Commonwealth
monitoring was never really in doubtit was part of the understanding
that had been reached with Qarase to hold the poll in the first
place. Australia and New Zealand subsequently dropped their sanctions
and the Commonwealth lifted its suspension on Fiji.
Chaudhry played no small part in his own political demise by
refusing to mobilise his supporters against the military-backed
regime and channelling opposition into futile legal proceedings.
Following the election, Chaudhry even sought to gain a post in
the cabinet dominated by his political enemies and those involved
in his ousting. Under the countrys race-based constitution,
there is provision that any party which wins 10 percent of the
vote must be offered a place in the cabinet. Qarase contemptuously
dismissed the Labour Partys constitutional claim to ministerial
positions and defied a legal victory obtained by Chaudhry just
as he did last year when a court ruled his administration illegal.
Yet Qarase was welcomed with open arms at the CHOGM gathering.
Australian Prime Minister Howard was so keen for the Fijian delegation
to attend that his government paid its accommodation billfive
suites at the luxury Hyatt Regency Coolum hotel. When Chaudhry
appeared at CHOGM, at the invitation of the delegations from India
and Mauritius, Qarase is reported to have taken umbrage at this
unprecedented breach of protocol.
What a spectacle: the man, who, if he had any political spine,
could with some legitimacy claim to be the constitutionally elected
prime minister of Fiji, being told by the beneficiary of a military
coup that he is out of place. And from the assembled CHOGM dignitaries,
who piously agreed in their Coolum declaration to reaffirm our
commitment to democracy, the rule of law, good governance, freedom
of expression and the protection of human rightsnot
a word, including from the African leaders!
The difference in approach towards Zimbabwe as opposed to Fiji
is anything but an accident or an oversight. Blair, Howard, Clark
and the other heads of state have no concern about human rights
or democracy in either country. There is a cynical consistency
in their apparent inconsistencythe guiding principle being
the strategic and economic interests of the major capitalist powers.
In the case of Zimbabwe, Mugabe, confronting an economic and
political crisis at home, has refused to implement the IMFs
economic restructuring demands and has demagogically appealed
to anti-British sentiment. Blair has seized on his anti-democratic
practices to directly intervene in Zimbabwean affairs as part
of grander ambitions on behalf of British capital in the African
continent as a whole.
In the case of Fiji, Australia and New Zealandthe major
powers in the southwest Pacifichave backed the Qarase regime
as the best guarantee of their interests in Fiji and the region.
While subsidising and protecting ethnic Fijian business operators,
the Qarase government has bent over backwards to please foreign
investors, offering them reduced corporate tax rates, generous
investment and depreciation allowances and outright tax exemptions
for export income.
See Also:
British Prime Minister Tony Blair declares
his hand on Zimbabwe
[9 March 2002]
Tensions continue to wrack
Fijian government
[22 February 2002]
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