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One step back, one step forward

Rageh Omaar

Published 10 January 2008

Despite current troubles, Africa is still progressing.

Just before Christmas, within hours of Jacob Zuma being elected to lead the African National Congress, defeating his bitter rival Thabo Mbeki, I got a text message from a friend in South Africa. "Oh shit!" it read, "there goes Africa . . ." Only three weeks later, as violence swept Kenya after the disputed elections, most of the British press expressed the same thought: how could this happen in peaceful Kenya? And if such chaos could happen there, what did it say about the rest of the continent?

In truth, Kenya's stability and prosperity have always been a facade. Its political system has set a benchmark not only for financial corruption in Africa, but also for the manipulation of tribal loyalties for political and economic ends. Whether for reasons of gerrymandering, for the advancement of allies or for economic benefit, political tribalism has been and is used as a kind of modern-day "rotten boroughs" system.

Similarly, in South Africa, Zuma has aggressively played on his Zulu identity and sense of Zulu marginalisation at the hands of a Xhosa-dominated ANC leadership to deflect criticism of himself, most shamefully as part of his defence in his trial on charges of raping the daughter of a family friend. His argument in court, that he was fulfilling the obligations of a Zulu man and patriarch by having sex with the young woman, was hugely damaging to South Africa.

As many experienced writers on Africa, both on the continent and in the west, have rightly argued, tribalism is by no means a uniquely African trait. Patronage within groups based on language, culture or geography exists, and is similarly used and abused all over the world for political and economic ends: it just isn't described as tribalism. The difference is that tribalism is an issue on which African countries and their leaders are judged, and, as we have seen in Zimbabwe, Somalia, Sudan and Congo, it can be used to shockingly violent effect.

Yet while South Africa and Kenya have grabbed the headlines in the past four weeks, one other important African story has gone largely unnoticed. It matters because it shows, yet again, that Africa is just too large, too diverse and multifaceted, for the political narrative to be defined by one issue. What makes the story even more fascinating is that it took place thousands of miles from the continent, in a quiet and orderly courtroom in The Hague.

I began my career in journalism at the Africa Service of the BBC. Just before Christmas 1989, Charles Taylor called the Focus on Africa programme from a satellite phone and declared to the world that he and his small band of fighters had just invaded Liberia from Côte d'Ivoire. What followed over the next decade was the most vicious and costly war, which not only ruined Liberia, but literally bled into neighbouring Sierra Leone. Taylor was at the heart of the conscious, bloody fragmentation of these two countries.

Despite trying for years to avoid being taken to the War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague, that is where he is this week. After a long delay, Taylor's trial has begun.

One of the first testimonies in the case against him was his plundering and use of so-called "conflict diamonds" as well as other natural resources, which fuelled the wars in both Liberia and Sierra Leone. This is a profoundly important issue for Africa: the lesson that leaders who use tribalism, violence and the economic rape of their country will see justice and be punished.

The west may see only the one step back that Africa has taken in Kenya and South Africa, but, in Liberia, it has taken a step forward.

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2 comments from readers

zakes
11 January 2008 at 02:17

Stop telling lies about Zuma, where are you from, lousy analyst? Zuma was voted into power by every ethnic group in the ANC. Half the delegates who produced Zuma's vote included Xhosa speaking delegates from the following regions of South Africa, the Eastern CApe, Western CApe, Northern CApe, KwaZulu-Natal, Free State. where do you get this ethnicity issue you are attributing to Zuma? If these people did not vote Zuma, because he is Zulu, they would have voted Mbeki who is Xhosa like them, but did not. Watch your analysis and stick to what you know Mr. Omaar!

ikotubo
16 January 2008 at 16:32

Yet another pathetic attempt by a Western liberal commentator (and before you attempt to correct me, I am aware that you are of African origin, Mr Omar) to find excuses for mindless misrule on my continent. Yes, Mr Taylor is being tried at The Hague; but that is manly because the Americans wanted him tried somewhere (not necessarily there, due to their hostility towards the International Criminal Court).

Indeed, at the time of his arrest, the Nigerian ruler, Obasanjo (another darling of Western liberals - deeply despised by the Nigerian people, it must be noted), happened to be in Washington begging for aid. Rather untypically, he was reportedly told in no uncertain terms: "release Taylor for trial or get lost." And what a coincidence that Taylor was immediately arrested and handed over to UN troops in his country - something Obasanjo had resolutely refused even to contemplate.

To interprete Taylor's trial - a one-off event - as a TREND in African affairs is therefore quite misleading, to say the least. In any event, is Mr Omar seriously suggesting that the likes of Kibaki and Zuma will also end up in The Hague because of their conduct? I hope not, because this would demonstrate a shocking ignorance of how that Court works.

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