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ICTJ in the News
June 29, 2009
South Africa’s Zuma is Out of Step With History
AllAfrica
By Comfort Ero and Piers Pigou
Just
ahead of this week's African Union summit in Libya, South Africa's President
Jacob Zuma has advocated an old and discredited approach for dealing with
African heads of state facing international justice, write Comfort Ero and Piers Pigou.
When a
leader of South Africa's ruling African National Congress speaks on such
critical issues as impunity for the perpetrators of human rights violations, the
rest of Africa listens. We listen because we recall with passion how apartheid
was dismantled, ushering in a new era of democracy for South Africa.
So
it comes as a shock that President Jacob Zuma used the recent meeting of the
World Economic Forum for Africa to call for a continental policy favouring
impunity. Sharing a roundtable conversation with President Paul Kagame of
Rwanda, Zuma proclaimed that the "world has changed" and that we must "do things
differently and ... not emphasise punishment" in dealing with leading perpetrators
of serious crimes.
His statement is embarrassing and retrogressive,
especially because the world has indeed changed -- but not in the ways Zuma
assumed.
What has changed is that over the last two decades a global
consensus has grown that amnesty for violent crimes is morally and legally
unacceptable. Africa led this change in many respects, and the
newly-democratised South Africa enthusiastically supported the creation of the
International Criminal Court in 2002.
What Zuma now proposes is not a
"new" approach but an old and discredited one that would reinforce outdated
visions of an Africa which resists human rights and is willing to tolerate the
worst forms of brutality.
At a time when Radovan Karadzic is being
brought before the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia, Charles
Taylor faces justice before the Special Court for Sierra Leone, and Peru has
tried and convicted Alberto Fujimori, Zuma has chosen to make the worst kind of
rationalization for African exceptionalism.
Even worse, Zuma's statement
was made just ahead of this week's African Union summit in Libya, which has on
its draft agenda at least two reports dealing with attempts to bring to trial
African heads of state. Zuma's "new" approach, coming just as the continent
faces pressures from some of its leaders to thwart justice, threatens to
undermine the legitimacy of international humanitarian law.
Zuma's
approach would protect the perpetrators and architects of violence at the
expense of redress for their victims. Not only is no thought given to providing
reparation to victims of such violence, but their right to see justice done
would be extinguished. When societies fail to make victims' needs a priority,
those societies risk new cycles of violence. President Zuma did not
distinguish between short-term peace processes and durable peacebuilding. His
"bold approach" would do more to promote political violence as a means of
gaining power than promote peace. He would invite leaders of political violence
to look forward to impunity and a mansion in a neighbouring state.
Zuma
presents this position -- a safe retirement home for African despots -- as being
"for the sake of our people," when clearly this protection is antithetical to
the public interest. His position suggests that domestic, regional and
international legal commitments can be airbrushed away, cloaked under the rubric
of the pragmatic notions of what best serves Africa. Many commentators
assume Zuma's remarks refer mainly to President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe. Zuma
is indeed faced with a serious problem in Zimbabwe that is likely to be resolved
only when Mugabe is persuaded to step aside.
Mugabe's decision to leave
the scene will likely depend on guarantees of impunity being extended to members
of his inner circle. That is all the more reason that accountability should not
be bargained away. Prospects for sustainable transformation in Zimbabwe require
more, not less accountability, extending to economic crimes and
corruption.
Perhaps Zuma's public remarks are a tactical gamble,
presenting himself as "on side" with the recalcitrant leaders while knowing full
well that Africa's political leadership can provide no meaningful guarantees of
impunity. If this benign interpretation is true, is it worth the egg that has
landed on his face as a result of appearing an apologist for the continent's
perpetrators?
Comfort Ero is deputy
director of the Africa Program of the International Center for Transitional
Justice. Piers Pigou is a senior associate at the ICTJ. "South Africa's Zuma is Out of Step With History" originally appeared in AllAfrica.
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