While NATO and the rebels were pummelling Libya and capturing Tripoli, on the 26th August 2011, President Thabo Mbeki addressed the SRC and SASCO of the University of Stellenbosch (US) to explain his take on the "historic events" in North Africa. [By the way, the former president's security was over the top. Accompanied by some 15 body guards, they made parts of the campus virtually inaccessible].
Condemning NATO for its intervention in Libya, Mbeki made no secret of his mission to the university. He went there to promote the African Union, and given, as he said, the university's "goals to stimulate dialogue, encourage critical thinking and reach for a more transformed campus" he gave a bizarre overview of the Arab uprisings using the most Machiavellian and implicitly contradictory logic.
Firstly, he argued rather lamely that both Tunisia and Egypt achieved their democratic transformation through their own home-grown uprisings. This happened because the police, army, and security forces were weak and there were no Western interventions.
Secondly, Mbeki argued that while both Egypt and Tunisia allowed successive fraudulent elections and were endemically corrupt, that finally contributed to the pot boiling over. Their respective leaders stayed in power far too long and maintained by extensive repressive machinery, their overthrow was long overdue.
Thirdly, Mbeki argued further that these youth uprisings "have served to advance the African democratic revolution". How - we still do not know how.
Fourthly, he invited students to get to grips with the all-Africa policy of the African Union, its charters, policy documents, and protocols and he further advised students to make links with their North African peers, to strive to transform the University of Stellenbosch into an African Centre of learning, teaching and research and to transform it into a "vital centre for the progressive fundamental transformation of our Continent, and therefore its renaissance."