SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities

This article analyses the opportunities and complexities of the SADC mediation in Zimbabwe’s Global Political Agreement (GPA) in facilitating and operationalising theprinciples and values of peace, security, human rights and democracy as set out in Article 4 of the SADC treaty. It attempts to interr...

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Main Author: Modeni M. Sibanda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2014-06-01
Series:Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/51
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spelling doaj-a382a477b83c426db15f2aab752ebe442020-11-24T22:10:36ZengAOSISAfrica’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review2310-21952310-21522014-06-0122215110.4102/apsdpr.v2i2.5150SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and ComplexitiesModeni M. Sibanda0University of Fort HareThis article analyses the opportunities and complexities of the SADC mediation in Zimbabwe’s Global Political Agreement (GPA) in facilitating and operationalising theprinciples and values of peace, security, human rights and democracy as set out in Article 4 of the SADC treaty. It attempts to interrogate the extent to which the regional grouping’s mechanisms for enforcing its principles and values have been successful.   The article argues that despite SADC’s noble commitment to promoting the development of democratic institutions and practices, as well as encouraging the observance of universal human rights, peace and security, the resolution of the Zimbabwe crisis shows that, in practice, the operationalisation of SADC protocol principles and values have been a sorry saga of delays, secrecy, purported agreements and nothing concrete coming out of it.  Using the Zimbabwe case study, this article further argues that SADC either lacks appropriate power and authority or is reluctant to hold member states accountable.  This seems so, given that as a regional body, it has allowed itself to be utterly inadequate to the task envisioned by the organ in resolving the Zimbabwe crisis. The paper concludes that the sum of all this has had the effect of exposing SADC and it being perceived as a weak regional organisation.http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/51SADC MediationRegional IntegrationSecurity CommunityAccountabilityTrustMonitoring and EvaluationZimbabwe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Modeni M. Sibanda
spellingShingle Modeni M. Sibanda
SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
SADC Mediation
Regional Integration
Security Community
Accountability
Trust
Monitoring and Evaluation
Zimbabwe
author_facet Modeni M. Sibanda
author_sort Modeni M. Sibanda
title SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
title_short SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
title_full SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
title_fullStr SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
title_full_unstemmed SADC Mediation in Zimbabwe's Global Political Agreement (GPA): A Reflection on Opportunities and Complexities
title_sort sadc mediation in zimbabwe's global political agreement (gpa): a reflection on opportunities and complexities
publisher AOSIS
series Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
issn 2310-2195
2310-2152
publishDate 2014-06-01
description This article analyses the opportunities and complexities of the SADC mediation in Zimbabwe’s Global Political Agreement (GPA) in facilitating and operationalising theprinciples and values of peace, security, human rights and democracy as set out in Article 4 of the SADC treaty. It attempts to interrogate the extent to which the regional grouping’s mechanisms for enforcing its principles and values have been successful.   The article argues that despite SADC’s noble commitment to promoting the development of democratic institutions and practices, as well as encouraging the observance of universal human rights, peace and security, the resolution of the Zimbabwe crisis shows that, in practice, the operationalisation of SADC protocol principles and values have been a sorry saga of delays, secrecy, purported agreements and nothing concrete coming out of it.  Using the Zimbabwe case study, this article further argues that SADC either lacks appropriate power and authority or is reluctant to hold member states accountable.  This seems so, given that as a regional body, it has allowed itself to be utterly inadequate to the task envisioned by the organ in resolving the Zimbabwe crisis. The paper concludes that the sum of all this has had the effect of exposing SADC and it being perceived as a weak regional organisation.
topic SADC Mediation
Regional Integration
Security Community
Accountability
Trust
Monitoring and Evaluation
Zimbabwe
url http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/51
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