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- <text id=89TT1023>
- <title>
- Apr. 17, 1989: Namibia:Botching The Peace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 17, 1989 Alaska
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 35
- NAMIBIA
- Botching the Peace
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Guerrilla incursions and U.N. ineptitude threaten independence
- </p>
- <p> It took eight years of painstaking diplomacy to craft the
- interlocking pieces of an international agreement to bring
- independence to Namibia, the last remnant of colonialism in
- Africa. It took just a week to unravel all that meticulous
- preparation in a bloody botch.
- </p>
- <p> Under terms of the pact, South Africa, which has ruled the
- Turkey-size territory for 74 years, agreed to permit independent
- elections and withdraw its 40,000 troops. That was to be done
- in coordination with the phased departure of 50,000 Cuban troops
- backing the Marxist regime in Angola, which gives sanctuary to
- the militant exiles of the South West African People's
- Organization, whose guerrilla army has been battling Pretoria's
- rule since 1966. The U.S.-brokered agreement was signed last
- December under the auspices of the U.N., which took on
- responsibility for policing Namibia's transition with an
- international peacekeeping force (UNTAG).
- </p>
- <p> But as the transition period dawned on April 1, some 1,300
- SWAPO troops armed with AK-47 rifles swarmed into Namibia from
- their bases in southern Angola. Even as thousands of
- red-green-and-blue-clad SWAPO supporters chanted "Freedom is in
- our hands" at noisy celebrations in the capital of Windhoek, the
- guerrillas were coaxing donkeys carrying rocket launchers and
- other artillery through the thick sand of the bush. According
- to captured prisoners, SWAPO commanders told their troops that
- UNTAG would allow them to establish military bases in Namibia,
- where they would be "confined to barracks" like the South
- African battalions. But their deployment was a flagrant
- violation of the cease-fire agreement, which calls for SWAPO
- forces to remain north of the 16th parallel, some 100 miles
- beyond the border.
- </p>
- <p> The well-trained forces of the South West Africa Police,
- including former members of the notorious "Koevoet" (crowbar)
- counterinsurgency unit, were waiting for the guerrillas. In the
- first large-scale clashes near the border town of Ruacana, 38
- SWAPO guerrillas were mowed down by machine-gun fire, while two
- policemen were killed and 14 wounded. Elsewhere, the guerrillas
- fared little better. All told, at least 260 guerrillas and 28
- Namibian security police were killed. UNTAG, which had less
- than one-fourth of its planned force on hand and barely 200
- soldiers in the area of fighting, could do no more than look on
- ineffectually.
- </p>
- <p> The SWAPO incursions allowed South Africa, which agreed to
- the independence plan only grudgingly, a rare opportunity to
- cry foul. Calling the violations a "grave situation," Foreign
- Minister Roelof ("Pik") Botha warned that the Namibian peace
- process "could collapse within hours." Pretoria applied
- pressure on UNTAG's Finnish commander, Martti Ahtisaari, to
- reactivate some South African military forces and ordered others
- back to service on its own. Backed by Western public opinion for
- once, South Africa continued to threaten an end to the treaty.
- Declared Foreign Minister Botha: "SWAPO must surrender, lay
- down their arms, hoist a white flag."
- </p>
- <p> But all parties have too much invested in the agreement to
- discard it lightly. In hopes of cooling off the violence,
- Pretoria called for a meeting over the weekend of the
- commission set up to monitor the progress of the border peace
- agreement.
- </p>
- <p> Though few had predicted violence in Namibia on the scale
- that erupted, UNTAG was woefully unprepared even for the minor
- clashes that were all but inevitable. Scarcely 1,200 of the
- 4,560-man force from Kenya, Malaysia and Finland that is
- scheduled to oversee the transition period was in place. At
- week's end UNTAG officials were considering emergency airlifts
- to bring in military personnel, many of them aboard navy
- vessels days away.
- </p>
- <p> Exiled SWAPO leader Sam Nujoma insisted that his men had
- already been inside the country, but his eleventh-hour bid to
- establish a military presence made little sense. Militarily, the
- guerrillas invited maximum reprisals by Namibian security forces
- that were all too ready and able to oblige. Politically, the
- bloody incursions gave the guerrillas' opponents ammunition to
- challenge their claim that they are the "sole and authentic"
- representative of Namibia's 1.25 million people.
- </p>
- <p> SWAPO is still expected to win a majority in next November's
- elections. But to gain complete control over the assembly that
- will write Namibia's new constitution, a party must capture
- two-thirds of the total vote, and there is considerable doubt
- that SWAPO can do that. It will face at least six opponents, the
- strongest being the moderate Democratic Turnhalle Alliance, a
- mixed-race consortium of ethnically based parties with
- considerable appeal to Namibia's 80,000 whites. Says Alliance
- Chairman Dirk Mudge, a white former Finance Minister: "It won't
- be a SWAPO landslide, believe me." Last week's violence cast
- doubt not only on whether the frail peace plan can hold but also
- on whether Namibia's political future might yet be settled by
- other means.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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