By Tichaona
Zindoga
IT was quite easy to view the recent meeting between
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and the Iranian ambassador here as one
depicting the former as making an ironic "U-turn" four months after boycotting
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he visited Zimbabwe.
The one temptation was to point to the uncomplimentary pronouncements that PM
Tsvangirai’s MDC-T party levelled against the Middle East country, apart from
snubbing the Iranian leader on three separate occasions of his excursion.
Tsvangirai neither welcomed the Iranian leader when he touched down at the
Harare International Airport on April 23, nor turned up at the State dinner
hosted in honour of the visiting leader by President Mugabe at State House.
He did not also attend the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair in Bulawayo where
President Ahmedinejad officially opened the 51st edition of the premier
exhibition.
Several MDC-T senior officials who had been part of the ZITF declared business
elsewhere.
However, it was a different matter on Thursday as, according to a report, "Mr
Tsvangirai wearing his PM’s hat — which he was supposed to wear during the ZITF
— welcomed President Ahmadinejad’s chief envoy to Harare at his Munhumutapa
office."
The report then cited: "The satire couldn’t have been clearer given that an
ambassador represents his head of state and government, and Mr Tsvangirai was
apparently lost to the irony."
Whatever the import of the supposed "U-turn" by the premier who reportedly told
the Iranian envoy that the inclusive Government is a unified Government and
working well, it is a good sign.
The beauty of it stems not only from the correction of the April childish and
irrational snub, which seemed to derive from MDC-T’s friends in the West who
have decided to view Iran as an "outpost of tyranny".
It will be noted though that Iran has proved to be a friendlier global player
than its accusers who have attacked and pillaged less powerful countries in the
name of democracy.
Both Zimbabwe and Iran are victims of Western meddling.
Tsvangirai’s latest move apparently is thankfully informed by Zimbabwe’s
long-held view that this hospitable country needs friends not enemies, which
President Mugabe repeated in July when he met an envoy from the hostile West.
Iran has been an important power, since the historic 1979 Islamic Revolution
that threw out the American puppet regime.
The emerging giant, whose land area equals that of Britain, Germany, Spain and
France combined, is irresistible for its being an energy superpower and its
shining example in busting unjust Western sanctions.
The people of Iran have devised homegrown solutions in fully exploiting their
natural resources and maximising on their competitive advantages and developing
their science and technology capacity.
The result has been that Iranian industries such as petro-chemicals,
agriculture, pharmaceuticals, military, automobile, textile, among others have
been phenomenal homegrown successes.
Over the years when Zimbabwe has been constricted, restricted and sanctioned by
the West and decided to look East, this same success of Iran has trickled to the
country.
In fact, Zimbabwe’s co-operation with fellow Non- Aligned Movement member Iran
whose three leaders have visited the country to date was etched in the 1991
Zimbabwe-Iran Joint Commission.
The sixth edition of the commission preceded President Ahmedinejad’s visit that
saw Zimbabwe and Iran focusing on political, economic, commercial and cultural
issues.
Several Memoranda of Understanding and agreements covering such areas as the
abolition of diplomatic visas, science and technology, training, mining,
agriculture, tourism, culture and health were signed.
Cumulatively the Zimbabwe-Iran Joint Commission has resulted in the two
countries increasingly co-operating in the areas of mining, trade, technology
transfer, agriculture, health, energy, aviation, education, water management,
defence and broadcasting.
The historic ZITF at which Iranian companies took more than 200 square metres of
exhibition space, occupied by 40 companies, making Iran the friendliest foreign
country at the fair, highlighted the growing ties between the two countries.
The country’s leader became the first non-African to officially open the fair in
Zimbabwe’s history.
During his Zimbabwe visit the Iranian leader officially launched the Industrial
Development Corporation tractor project in Harare and toured textile concern
Modzone Enterprises in Chitungwiza.
The two are joint Zimbabwe/Iran ventures.
With Iranian companies strongly represented at the just-ended Harare
Agricultural Show, which Tsvangirai also visited, he must have left with a
feeling of deja vu before he met Ambassador Pournajaf.
To all intents and purposes, whatever "hat" he might wear, whether as the Prime
Minister or leader of the Western friend in the MDC as a Zimbabwean should see
the friend that is in Iran.
To be a bit romantic, some political scientists have even pointed to the strong
cultural ties that exist between Zimbabwe and Iran dating back to the 13th
century when people in the two countries traded in ivory and gold.
Contacts with Europeans, by contrast, are dated to have started some 200 years
later.
In this vein, when the premier wears his other "hat" he is not only being
ahistorical but also unscientific, naïve and hypocritical.
One analyst has pointed out in an article the extent of such hypocrisy and
double-dealing.
MDC senior leaders reportedly have as of March 2009 been meeting, seeking and
receiving donations from the Iranian Embassy.
"Their leader Morgan Tsvangirai has held several meetings with the Iranian
Ambassador Rasool Momeni since 2009 where not only has he sought financial
assistance for his party, but he also indicated that the MDC looks forward to
cultivating a symbiotic relationship with Iran," said the analyst.
On March 6 2009 the premeir held a meeting with Ambassador Momeni.
He indicated that the Government of Zimbabwe would like to pursue the MOUs it
has over the years signed with the government of Iran, chief of these being the
refurbishment of the Feruka Oil Refinery and the digitalisation at the Zimbabwe
Broadcasting Holdings.
The MDC-T-dominated town of Bindura benefited from the benevolence of the
Iranian government and people, leading to the conferment of the freedom of the
city on January 29 2010 to Ambassador Rassol Momeni.
Ms Thokozani Khupe, MDC-T vice-president and Deputy Prime Minister presided over
the function.
Other examples of Iranian help include a US$1 000 donation to buy mealie-meal
and cooking oil for distribution to his constituency extended to MDC Member of
Parliament for Chikomba Central Moses Jiri by the Iranian Embassy.
Such exchanges were made in several other incidents involving the MDC-T.
In general terms, while Iran is not endowed with the Western megabucks, which
have not been forthcoming as promised the MDC in particular and Zimbabweans in
general, Iran has shown more than willingness to help Zimbabwe.
Where the others have wanted to see Zimbabwe "crash and burn", and perhaps
sanitise that with "humanitarian" aid, Iran has co-operated with Zimbabwe in the
same areas such as agriculture that the West wanted to see destroyed.
That the countries that Tsvangirai supports in his other "hat" represent a
desperate and dying age of the empire is also a matter of fact, while emerging
economies in the East and South represent the future.
Source: http://www.herald.co.zw/section.aspx?sectid=12&cat=12
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