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10 December, 2010 - 16:44

SADC taught a lesson by West Africa over stolen elections

Four Western African presidents together to discuss Ivory Coast.   data/files/ecowas.jpg

West Africa has dismissed unity government proposals, favoured by the Southern African Development Community (SADC), as a bad idea, demonstrating how the regional bloc should have handled Zimbabwe’s stolen election.

by Alex Bell, SW Radio Africa

The West African bloc ECOWAS has officially recognised Alassane Ouattara as the Ivory Coast’s president-elect, after a disputed poll with the country’s decade long leader Laurent Gbagbo.

Gbagbo has defied international demands to step down and yield to Ouattara. He has instead been sworn in for a new term as Ivorian president with the backing of the military, even though the electoral commission said the winner was Ouattara.

ECOWAS’ acting President, Nigerian leader Goodluck Jonathan, has now warned against efforts to forge a deal between the rivals, as was done in Zimbabwe and Kenya in recent years.

“We’ve seen that these governments of national unity ... it doesn’t really work. Elections have been declared, somebody has won, so he (Gbagbo) has to hand over,” Jonathan said.

The Nigerian leader also announced that the Ivory Coast has been suspended from the regional bloc, in a move that critics hope will isolate Gbagbo and his grip on power.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who now wields almost no power as Prime Minister in the unity pact, this week said a coalition government in the Ivory Coast would set a bad example to other African countries.

“I’m sure that will be the solution again - have a coalition as a solution. They already have a template for it. It is called ‘go through the back door and still retain the power that you lost through the mandate of the people’,” Tsvangirai told the Reuters news service in an interview.

“The unfortunate thing is that we are seeing this repetition of people losing an election and want to come back to restore their power position through the back door. It is not different from Kenya, it is not different from Zimbabwe, now we have got Ivory Coast,” he said.

Mugabe on the other hand has sent a congratulatory message to Gbagbo.

Zimbabwean political analyst Professor John Makumbe said on Wednesday that ECOWAS’ position is admirable, and demonstrates clearly that SADC “is just a toothless bulldog.” He said this contrast between how the two regional blocs deal with stolen elections should be a serious lesson to SADC. But he expressed concern than SADC “does not have the capacity to learn.”

“If you look at the dictatorships in Southern Africa, you will see it is the DNA of former liberation movements not to give up power, no matter what,” Makumbe said.
The analyst added that he hoped the strong West African attitude will also develop at the AU.

“I would like to see the AU adopt this attitude, and maybe someone can develop a code of conduct that ECOWAS, and most definitely SADC, has to abide by,” Makumbe said.

He added: “We can only hope that some of ECOWAS’ success can rub off.”

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