The Herald (Harare)
Published by the government of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe: Country Should Learn From Cuba

Political And Mabasa Sasa

4 October 2008


opinion

Harare — EVERY year for well over a decade now without fail, Cuba presents to the United Nations a report outlining the effects of sanctions on the populace of the largest island in the Caribbean.

In that report, Cuba outlines the impact of the embargo that the United States imposed on that country just because the people there opted to go with a political, economic, social and indeed cultural ideology that is different from that espoused by Washington.

The result of this campaign has been that in 16 consecutive resolutions -- since 1992 -- the vast majority of the UN membership have called for the United States to lift its illegal embargo on the island.

Last year, 184 countries supported the resolution.

So convincing are the reports that even the United Kingdom, a close ally of the US in its sickeningly arrogant engagement of the non-white world, has had no reason not to support this resolution.

In fact, only the tiny nations of Marshall Islands and Palau support the US in opposing the resolution, along with Israel, because they all depend almost entirely on American charity and patronage for their day-to-day survival.

At the same time, Cuba has invested heavily in ensuring the rest of the world sees the injustice of America's policy towards Havana; from supporting terrorists, barring US tourism to that country to blocking companies that want to from even buying a banana from the island.

In some 100 countries across the world, people have established various official solidarity organisations and pressure groups that lobby their home governments to press the US to change its policy towards Cuba as well as to simply educate the indigenous populations on what is happening on that island and how shameful Washington's behaviour is.

Zimbabwe has a Zimbabwe-Cuba Friendship Society and a Free the Cuban 5 Committee (which lobbies for the release of five Cuban patriots who are being unjustly kept in American jails), and this is something that one will find in many countries across the globe.

The point is that Cuba has created a foreign policy that is geared towards fighting the illegal sanctions that it has had to live with for nearly half a century now.

More importantly, they have not only moulded such a foreign policy, but they have invested heavily in it in terms of both financial and human resources.

Staff at Cuban embassies and consulates all over Southern Africa -- and this is likely the case across the world -- are known to be extremely proactive in defence of their revolution and in spreading the word to the people of their host countries so that they are fully aware of what is going on.

That is why America has found it hard to sell the lie that Cde Fidel Castro presided over an evil system and his brother Cde Raul is the new great Satan overseeing a diabolic communist administration that enjoys imprisoning people and executing them for expressing a contrary view.

That is why since 1992 -- and without fail this will be the 17th consecutive time -- the world has overwhelmingly voted for a lifting of America's illegal sanctions regime.

The question is: What are we doing?

Zimbabwe has been under official US sanctions for around five years now, though informal sanctions started round about the time this country intervened in the DRC to help a fellow Southern African nation defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity against the wishes of Western world that wanted anarchy to facilitate the unrestricted rape of that huge country's vast natural resources.

And the fact is that it is highly unlikely that American and European Union sanctions will be lifted any time soon.

Of course, there is always need for optimism that common sense will prevail but history has shown us that it is easier to call for and see to the imposition of sanctions than it is to have them lifted.

Nelson Mandela -- that man the West so much loves to celebrate as if they did not imprison him for close to three decades -- was officially and legalistically regarded as a terrorist right up to this year as was the South African ruling party, the African National Congress!

The reality is that while people hope that sanity shall inform US and EU policies on Zimbabwe, it just might be a little while longer before these illegal measures are taken out of issue.

In the meantime what is the nation doing about this state of affairs?

It is not enough to repeatedly whine about the evils of sanctions without doing anything to mitigate their impact and cushion the people of Zimbabwe against the economic hardships.

Cuba has devised a foreign policy that emphasises the importance of showing the world the injustice that is being perpetrated by Washington.

The benefit of this approach is that the rest of the world no longer views Cuba through the lenses created by the United States.

As such, they formulate their own individual policies on Cuba that stand regardless of their individual policies towards the United States.

This has meant that over the years more and more countries have been doing business with Cuba rather than blindly follow America's lead even though it is a real military risk to pursue a policy line opposed to Washington's.

What have been Zimbabwe's foreign policy objectives since the DRC war started and the West and its IMF decided to turn the screws on our economy?

In January 1999, a year after the DRC war started, the then Foreign Affairs Minister Cde Stan Mudenge outlined Zimbabwe's foreign policy thus: "Zimbabwe's foreign policy objective is fundamentally to help safeguard and enhance the security and prestige of the country and the quality of life of its people by engaging with other countries at various levels in order to influence their behaviour so that an international environment conducive to the attainment of these goals is created and maintained.

"The challenge for our foreign policy is to formulate a series of policies and principles that would help create an international environment conducive to the attainment of that goal. What are those challenges? Security for the country. Peace and stability in the country and its environs to allow and encourage investment and economic development.

"They also include forming partnerships with others to create larger markets both for attracting greater investment interest from outsiders and regional players and also for our own companies to benefit from the economies of scale that come with those bigger markets."

This writer is yet to come across anything dramatically different from this policy position since 1999 and will proceed on the understanding that essentially our foreign policy largely remains the same as it was when Cde Mudenge explained it.

It appears as if since that time, President Mugabe has been at the forefront of these foreign policy objectives.

Relevant Links

Here and there, some ministers and a few ambassadors have been seen to be doing anything to "help safeguard and enhance the security and prestige of the country and the quality of life of its people by engaging with other countries at various levels in order to influence their behaviour so that an international environment conducive to the attainment of these goals is created and maintained".

The inescapable truth is that had our diplomatic missions been doing this we would have been seeing greater involvement of the Non-Aligned Movement in advocating Zimbabwe's position at forums such as the United Nations.

There has been a serious and debilitating failure by all the relevant stakeholders in the Government to successfully lobby for official international support for Zimbabwe in opposition to the sanctions.

More importantly, had a well co-ordinated information campaign been sustained in key countries across the globe investment and trade would have been growing.

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Author: buddhamate
Sat Oct 4 11:59:27 2008

You could learn something from Cuba,I might say. One difference that might be a touch obvious though is that Cuba's got Castro and poor old Zimbabwe's only got, whether they like it or not, Bob.

Author: prem
Sat Oct 4 15:36:07 2008

The answer to why Zimbabwe is not doing anything to mitigate the adverse effects of sanctions is quite evident to the people in the streets in Harare while The Herald is deliberately ignoring the reality.

The answer is that Mugabe thugs and cronies are benefitting from the sanctions and that they would like the sanctions to continue for ever. Sanctions is the excuse Mugabe is putting forward to maintain his military-type grip on the country's future. Sanctions enable his thugs to continue their illegal trade across the border trade and enable them with Gono's tacit support to enter into illicit… [Read Full Text]



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