Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Big dictators get away with murder as AU targets little Comoros

By Madibeng Kgwete: posted on 26 March 2007

Heads of States of the African Union adopted the African Union Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance last year in January at a summit held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Amongst the African leaders present at the summit were Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his counterparts from Libya (Colonel Muammar AlGhattafi) and Sudan (Omar el Bashir).

The list of undemocratic African rulers is long. Bear in mind the likes of King Mswati of Swaziland, Theodore Nguema of Equatorial Guinea and Paul Biya of Cameroon. Biya, for example, has been in power since 1982. He’s still sitting over there today.

Currently, AU forces are pushing a self-appointed president of the Comoros out of power. Mohamed Bacar, a French-trained former soldier, is said to have stubbornly clung on to power after an illegal election last year, 2007.

When the AU leaders adopted the Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance, they said they were doing so because they were seeking to entrench in Africa “a political culture of change of power based on the holding of regular, free, fair and transparent elections conducted by competent, independent and impartial national electoral bodies.”

It may be too soon to rate African countries’ compliance with the charter, but, judging by the way preparations have been going in Zimbabwe ahead of Saturday’s election, one can say it is business as usual despite the adoption of the charter. Today does not seem any better than yesterday.

The Comoros is a soft target for the AU forces. Other undemocratic leaders know that they will not face similar action even if they defy the AU. Even worse is the fact that the AU forces overthrowing Bacar are supported by undemocratic countries.

Sudan has deployed its forces to join the overthrow of Bacar, but the Sudanese President himself, Omar el-Bashir, not only has the Dafur genocide in his backyard, but he himself also came to power through undemocratic means.

According to various historical sources, el-Bashir came to power in June 1989 through a military coup against the democratically elected government of Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi. The irony is glaring.

The AU, by targeting the Comoros whilst ignoring bigger tyrants, has started to turn the Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance into another useless paper. The undemocratic cycle goes round and round unabated.

If the African political elite are genuinely interested in democracy and good governance on the continent, the AU must treat all states as equal partners and treat undemocratic rulers similarly. The same should apply to the European Union: sanctions against undemocratic African governments must not border on hypocrisy and selective justice.

2 comments:

Muleyate ©2008-2019 OnlyTruth said...

In response of the blog"Big dictators get away with murder as AU targets little Comoros" posted on 3:37 AM on Mar 26, 2008 Though you posted this blog long time ago, I still find it interesting and to pical

yes I agree with you more Nelson, realy we should each an every country the same way. Remember Hitler of Germany, he was bad dictator, but he was praised as hero by the westernsand we even like his role in accademic History while we were still at High school.

What I realise with the countries of the west is that they do not want African to be indipendent. If you stand up like mugabe, they portray you as a dispot.

Even in Africa the are still countries that still perpetuate the western ideas, rather than uniting and develop our continent.

Africa will remain Underdeveloped, if we still condemn our own leaders.

Muleyate ©2008-2019 OnlyTruth said...

Muleya Tshimangadzo elea said...
In response of the blog"Big dictators get away with murder as AU targets little Comoros" posted on 3:37 AM on Mar 26, 2008 Though you posted this blog long time ago, I still find it interesting and to pical

yes I agree with you more Nelson, realy we should each an every country the same way. Remember Hitler of Germany, he was bad dictator, but he was praised as hero by the westernsand we even like his role in accademic History while we were still at High school.

What I realise with the countries of the west is that they do not want African to be indipendent. If you stand up like mugabe, they portray you as a dispot.

Even in Africa the are still countries that still perpetuate the western ideas, rather than uniting and develop our continent.

Africa will remain Underdeveloped, if we still condemn our own leaders.