SADC Tribunal: Zuma complicit in Tribunal's effective disbandment
The DA can exclusively reveal that, following this week's SADC Summit, a decision was taken not to renew the terms of the judges presiding over the SADC Tribunal- a step which will result in the Tribunal's effective disbandment. In so doing, SADC has ensured that the Tribunal will not sit to hear the controversial cases concerning the conduct of the Zimbabwean government currently on the Tribunal's roll- thereby protecting the interests of the Mugabe administration indefinitely.
These cases primarily concern allegations of human rights abuses committed under the current Zimbabwean administration, and the Mugabe government's continual defiance of a 2008 ruling by the Tribunal, which declared the country's devastating land reform programme as unlawful.
Initially, SADC tried to conceal its attempts to disassemble the highly-respected regional court by reporting that the attending heads of state had ordered a six month review of the "role, functions and terms of reference" of the Tribunal. However, the DA has received reliable information that SADC has in fact instructed that the Tribunal's judges be effectively removed of their powers.
The stage for SADC's decision was set by President Jacob Zuma- who delivered, in his capacity as SADC appointed mediator to Zimbabwe, a glowing report on the progress made in resolving the Zimbabwean political impasse at this week's SADC Summit. His report failed to address the considerable obstacles blocking the path to the establishment of a democratic dispensation in that country and he remained defiantly tight-lipped on whether action should be taken against Zimbabwe for its contravention of the 2008 Tribunal ruling.
SADC has now followed Zuma's lead in pandering to Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe. Instead of instituting punitive measures against the Zimbabwean government for its contemptuous conduct, it has shifted its attention to the Tribunal. It is hugely significant that SADC appears to have willingly dismantled its most respected structure to protect a rogue member state.