
Africa's Contradictory Peace Initiative on Russia-Ukraine Crisis, Ramaphosa Draws Media Criticism In South Africa
27 June 2023 00:14
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By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa may underestimate the widespread media attacks inside his domain about the last round-trip intended to broker peace between two warring former Soviet republics, Russia and Ukraine. Both shared geographical borders and down the years since Soviet's collapse have unreservedly claimed to be observing the international laws relating to their territorial integrity and political sovereignty as recognized by the United Nations. Russia declared 'special military operation' on Ukraine since February 24, 2022. It was approved by the State Duma and Federation Council, the House of Representatives and the Senate respectively. But was it approved by the Security Council of the United Nations? Did Russia's commit crimes by breaking into Ukraine's territory with its armed forces?
With threats of resorting to the use of nuclear weapons, it becomes
absolutely necessary to find suitable solutions. It has created global
economic instability and wide-spread social discontent among the
population due to rising commodity prices. The situation has adversely
affected most countries around the world. African countries are not
excluded as they largely depend on imports of fertilizers and grains
from Russia and Ukraine. The disruption in supplies forced a group
headed by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa who went on June 16 to
Kyiv and June 17 to St. Petersburg to present the ten-point peace plan
to share the continent's perspectives with Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
In
St. Petersburg, Putin interrupted the discussions to reiterate aspects
of the situation with Ukraine and categorically indicated to African
leaders his logic of war is flawless and consistent with United Nations
Charter. As expected, Russian officials have reacted differently after
the high-profile meetings, some expressed signs of pessimism. For
instance, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said, after the three-hour
meeting that the Africans' peace plan consisted of ten (10) elements,
"was not formulated on paper."
"The main
conclusion, in my opinion, from today's conversation is that our
partners from the African Union have shown an understanding of the true
causes of the crisis that was created by the West, and have shown an
understanding that it is necessary to get out of this situation on the
basis of addressing the underlying causes," Lavrov said, but the African
delegation had not brought the Russian leader any message from
Zelenskyy.
"The peace initiative proposed by
African countries is very difficult to implement, difficult to compare
positions," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Under the headline –
Kremlin's decision to demilitarize Ukraine has largely been achieved –
the Ukrainskaya Pravda reported that Kremlin's Press Secretary, Dmitry
Peskov, had said the task of the aggressor country on the so-called
demilitarization of Ukraine has largely been fulfilled.
During
the two meetings in Kyiv and St. Petersburg, Ramaphosa was joined by
the presidents of Comoros, Senegal, and Zambia, as well as Egypt's prime
minister and envoys from the Republic of Congo and Uganda. The key aim
of the African peace mission primarily to propose "confidence-building
measures" in order to facilitate peace between the two countries. It was
to seek a peaceful settlement of the conflict which began late February
2022. In between, the African peace officers were particularly
concerned with issues related to food insecurity, including African
access to grain and fertilizer affected by the war.
Long
before the peace- brokering trip, Ramaphosa's administration faced
condemnation over its "neutrality" in foreign policy, and especially
South Africa's relations, the friendly partnership, with Russia and
China. That has added to mountains of internal problems, including
energy deficits, youth unemployment and sky-rocketing cost of living
inside South Africa. Now Ramaphosa, who led the delegation, was
criticized upon his final return home. But right from the start, it
appeared unlikely to achieve peace in that part of Europe. In a spiky
final chess-game, Ramaphosa imported the incredible Russia-Ukraine
commodity (conflict or crisis) back to South Africa.
South
African media gravitates between the narrating causes of the
developments between the two former Soviet republics and its
implications particularly for Africa. For Africa, it is the question of
food supply, or appropriately how to sustain or preserve addiction for
food import-dependency. For these African countries, there is no other
alternative than to reconnect to regular supplies from Russia and
Ukraine.
Diverse accusations ceaselessly awash the
media landscape. The opposition Democratic Alliance called for
Ramaphosa to account for the use of public funds in what it called a
"failed PR stunt." Its leader, John Steenhuisen, said Ramaphosa
disgraced South Africa in the "so-called peace mission". And others
unreservedly referred to its failure to provide a path to peace.
Ultimately, it was a missed opportunity for South Africa to reposition
itself on the world stage.
Worse still, most of
the leading South African media questioned why Ramaphosa had embarked on
that sure-to-fail peace mission. The mainstream reports focused on
characterization of the president. For instance, the Business Day's
editorial is typical: "It's not clear whether Ramaphosa was so naive as
to expect that peace could be brokered or was simply cynically making
the gesture in an attempt to demonstrate SA's nonaligned credentials."
Business
Day's reporter Steven Grootes frankly asked: Do Ramaphosa and his
foreign minister Naledi Pandor, as both have consistently acknowledged
that Russia is a "friend” to South Africa, still believe Russia is a
friend, even after informing them of their arrival in Kyiv? This is
almost certainly the first time in the history of South Africa as a
nation-state that its leader has been in a city against which missiles
have been launched by a "friendly” nation which knew they were there.
The criticism will be appropriately crisp: if your friend launches
missiles at you, can you name any enemies who have done the same?
Dr.
Tristen Taylor's report in Businesslive media underlined the fact that
the president's diplomatic efforts were wasted on the wrong conflict on
the wrong continent. So the president went to Kyiv and St Petersburg on a
forlorn peace mission. Both Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin
declined to implement a ceasefire, and no-one was particularly
surprised.
According to the report, the mission
was an absolute farce, and not because President Cyril Ramaphosa's
excessively large and exceptionally well-armed security detail and a
bunch of journalists ended up getting stuck on a Polish runway. That was
actually a surprise. The mission was a tragic farce for three reasons:
the composition of the delegation, the diplomatic effort being focused
on the wrong war, and because Ramaphosa should have gone to a different
country. The report written by Dr. Tristen Taylor, a freelance
journalist and photographer. He is also a research fellow in
environmental ethics at Stellenbosch University.
In
addition. another local media reported that Ramaphosa had hardly
finished his peace pitch before Putin interrupted. He offered nothing in
response to their pleas to unblock urgent grain exports and end a war
which has affected the African continent particularly hard. He rejected
their appeals to seek a ceasefire "through negotiations and diplomatic
means” reportedly challenging their plan, which is predicated on
internationally accepted borders.
It's not clear
whether Ramaphosa was so naive as to expect that peace could be brokered
or was simply cynically making the gesture in an attempt to demonstrate
South Africa's nonaligned credentials. Either way, one hopes there was
much learnt as a result of his mission - because the bill was steep and
the reputational damage deep.
One of the
consistent features of the reporting on the South African plane that was
stranded in Poland is that it was carrying a large number of weapons.
As the Sunday Times reported, "Highly placed South African government
insiders said the arms included long-range sniper rifles and weapons
normally used in serious conflict."
At this stage,
it is difficult to know what these weapons were for. While snipers are a
common feature of presidential security in South Africa (they can often
be seen around events like the State of the Nation Address, for
example) it seems unlikely that either Ukrainian or Russian officials
would grant permission for South African snipers to operate on their
soil.
The Sunday Times wrote it was also difficult
to believe that these weapons would be necessary (in the event, it
turns out that much more important for the safety of Ramaphosa was a
bomb shelter in a nearby hotel). This may well lead to more questions
being asked about the South African National Defence Force and what is
really happening inside it. It is obvious that the debate around Russia
and Ukraine in our society is about to enter a new phase with Ramaphosa
likely to face criticism of even greater intensity.
Mia
Swart is Senior Lecturer in International Human Rights Law at Edge Hill
University and Visiting Professor at the University of the
Witwatersrand. Mia Swart wrote in an opinion article that underscoring
the fact "one of the reasons South Africa remains tied to Russia is that
Russia has helped provide a financial lifeline to the African National
Congress (ANC)." Earlier this year, it was reported that the ANC had
received R15-million from a company tied to a sanctioned Russian
oligarch. But then the South African government cannot continue to be
blind to the illegality and inhumanity of Russia’s February 2022
invasion of Ukraine. It cannot continue to be blind to the pre-2022
human rights violations committed during Russia's 2014 annexation of
Crimea.
South Africa's ties to Russia appear to be
not only ideological, but also material. Yet our government wants to
convince us that it is not about the money. (In the run-up to next
year’s election the ANC knows it needs all the financial help it can
get.) Members of the government are not only deaf to the sound of
missiles in Kyiv, but they are also tone deaf to the demands of a world
order which foregrounds humanitarian concerns and human rights.
If
the ANC continues to not honour the human rights commitments on which
our constitutional democracy is built, it will lead to economic and
reputational ruin. By continuing to support Russia, Pandor and others in
the government are committing "kamikaze diplomacy”. This means they are
willing to destroy South Africa's reputation for the sake of supporting
Russia, concluded Senior Lecturer Swart.
The
first is that African governments, especially in South Africa, can’t do
right for doing wrong in the racist imaginary. The second is that the
pope and the Japanese prime minister appear to side with Ukraine, but
want a peaceful settlement. Ramaphosa and Pandor appear to side with
Russia, and (also) prefer a peaceful settlement. It is difficult to
ignore or dismiss the racist undertones and Afro-pessimism at the base
of intellectual responses to South Africa's peace mission to Russia and
Ukraine. The African Peace Mission had "failed to spark enthusiasm from
either Moscow or Kyiv” according the report in the Daily Maverick.
News24,
another South Africa's media added Ivor Ichikowitz in its report. The
arms dealer who was ‘supporting’ Ramaphosa's Ukraine peace mission says
he never sold to Russia. Ichikowitz has denied supporting Russia and has
been outspoken in support of a peaceful resolution to the conflict. The
founder of arms manufacturer Paramount, Ivor Ichikowitz, says there is
no conflict of interest in his involvement in helping to coordinate
African leaders' peace mission to Ukraine and Russia. The presidency
refused to answer questions about the involvement of Ichikowitz and the
Brazzaville Foundation's Jean-Yves Ollivier in the peace mission.
The
South African Presidency's statement did not mention Ollivier,
Ichikowitz or the Brazzaville Foundation's participation. "Participants
included the president of the Comoros Islands and current president of
the African Union, HE Othman Ghazali, president of Egypt, HE Abdel
Fattah El-Sisi, president of Senegal HE Macky Sall, president of Uganda
HE Yoweri Museveni, and president of Zambia HE Hakainde Hichilema," read
the statement.
None of the Presidency's
statements on the mission mentioned the involvement of the Brazzaville
Foundation. That, however, on May 19, Newsweek quoted Ollivier as saying
most of the African leaders were his "personal friends" and he started
negotiating with Kyiv and Moscow about a peace mission with African
leaders.
Asked about the involvement of Ollivier
and Ichikowitz in the peace mission, Ramaphosa's spokesperson, Vincent
Magwenya, told News24 that he would not answer any questions in that
regard. A spokesperson for the Brazzaville Foundation informed News24
Ollivier would not be granting further interviews and referred News24 to
a statement from June 12, which read: "We are delighted that the
meetings between the African heads of state and the leaderships of
Russia and Ukraine have been confirmed. The ongoing arrangements are
being handled through the official and diplomatic channels of the
respective countries."
Inside South Africa, the
Africa Peace Initiative headed by President Cyril Ramaphosa has sparked a
week-long giggling and grinning, debates and discussions in the media.
The controversies and complexities surrounding the last peace trip will,
to a large extent, influence both the future internal politics and
foreign policy. It has become an important matter for the middle-class,
the business community and politicians alike in South Africa. Besides
that, the Russia-Ukraine crisis indeed threatens Africa's unity.
Majority of the countries in theoretical terms claim neutrality, but the
Russia-Ukraine crisis has already visibly divided Africa.
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Africa's Contradictory Peace Initiative on Russia-Ukraine Crisis, Ramaphosa Draws Media Criticism In South Africa
By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh South African President Cyril Ramaphosa may underestimate the widespread media attacks inside his domain about the last round-trip intended to broker peace between two warring former Soviet republics, Russia