Rajoelina expected to maintain President Mnangagwa’s Sadc momentum

Kelvin Jakachira
Correspondent

President Mnangagwa handed the chairmanship of SADC to Madagascar’s Andry Rajoelina at the 45th SADC Summit of Heads of State and Government held in Antananarivo, Madagascar recently.

President Mnangagwa’s tenure as SADC chair was unprecedented, characterised by interest never witnessed in the region since the inception of the regional bloc on August 17, 1992. Quiz sessions aimed at raising greater awareness of SADC issues among schoolchildren and the youths were a feature on television and radio in Zimbabwe.

A Zanu PF politician who is also an MP and chairperson of Parliament’s Foreign Affairs and International Trade Committee Cde Webster Shamu described President Mnangagwa’s performance as “about action, not words”.

“There are moments and achievements that go beyond political party persuasion; they speak to us as Zimbabweans, united in pride and purpose. This chairmanship is one such moment,” Cde Shamu declared in Parliament last Thursday.

President Mnangagwa indeed, lived up to expectations and no doubt, regional leaders that have occupied the post of SADC chair since 1992 were routine in their leadership approach and did not scale the heights reached by the outgoing chair.

During his one-year term as SADC chair, President Mnangagwa championed deeper regional integration, economic cooperation, industrialisation, food security and was an advocate of strengthened people to people relations.

He championed the development of strategic corridors and one-stop border posts to enhance the region’s integration efforts. President Mnangagwa pushed for the establishment of a fully-fledged SADC Parliament.

Under the framework, all SADC Parliamentary Forum (SADC PF) member parliaments are now formally united in support of the region’s transformation agenda, strengthening the foundation for deeper regional integration and parliamentary cooperation.

The SADC PF drive reached a historic milestone on August 17, 2025 when the signing took place during the closing ceremony of the 45th Ordinary Summit of Sadc Heads of State and Government in Antananarivo.

“On that very day, Madagascar and Mauritius signed the Agreement Amending the Treaty, bringing to 15 the members that have signed up – thanks to the leadership prowess of His Excellency, the President,” Cde Shamu said.

President Mnangagwa also commissioned the construction of a SADC Standby Force Regional Logistics Depot in Botswana, which will play an important role in enhancing the region’s preparedness and response to conflict and humanitarian emergencies.

Under his watch as SADC chair, major milestones were recorded in implementing high-impact regional infrastructure projects. To achieve sustainable progress, President Mnangagwa said it was imperative that SADC urgently comes up with inventive and reliable sources of funding pointing out that the SADC Regional Development Fund is a low-hanging fruit, which, when operationalised, will provide alternative financing for critical infrastructure projects.

To show commitment to the SADC Regional Development Fund, Zimbabwe has ratified the Protocol. Eight other SADC member states have also done the same.

The intention with the SADC Fund is to raise funds from member states, development partners and the private sector with the aim of supporting regional development and strengthening integration.

“The SADC Regional Development Fund is a low-hanging fruit, which, when operationalised, will provide alternative financing for critical infrastructure projects,” President Mnangagwa said as he handed over the chair.

During President Mnangagwa’s tenure, the regional bloc collectively realised successes in developing institutions that underpin democracy and good governance. In addition, he advocated that events such as the key SADC Industrialisation Week become an annual occurrence, providing platforms for networking, towards enhanced trade and investment.

But perhaps President Mnangagwa’s most outstanding contribution as SADC chair was his drive towards the promotion of peace and stability in the region which propelled him as an astute mediator in intricate conflicts.

As SADC chair, President Mnangagwa led initiatives to end the perennial bloody conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. The FDLR comprises mainly remnants of the perpetrators of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in which over one million people were killed in cold blood. The Congolese army in collaboration with the FDLR and a collection of brutal militias and the Burundian army are battling a revolution by the AFC/M23 rebels who are fighting to protect their rights in the eastern DR Congo where the Tutsi community is being killed and violated.

At the invitation of DR Congo president Felix Tshisekedi, SADC deployed troops on December 15, 2023 hoping to repeat the 2012-13 success of the United Nations Force Intervention Brigade which drove out the M23 from the South Kivu capital, Goma.

The SADC force replaced the East African regional force which was expelled by Tshisekedi who wanted it to go into direct combat with the AFC/M23.

The East African regional force had been tasked with overseeing an M23 withdrawal from territory it had captured. The rebels had withdrawn from most of the territory that it controlled to pave way for peace talks, but the DR Congo leader wanted the East African regional force to go into direct combat with the rebels which was outside its mandate.

With President Mnangagwa, an intelligence supremo in his own right, now at the helm of SADC, he sought a quick withdrawal of the regional force from the eastern DR Congo in order to pursue a lasting peace process. As a result, SADC leaders on March 13 terminated the mission and announced a phased withdrawal. In doing so, President Mnangagwa demonstrated sound leadership especially after he understood the complexities of the conflict. The decision to join hands with the East African Community in finding peace in the troubled eastern DRC Congo was a masterstroke. Progress is being registered. President Mnangagwa and Kenyan President William Ruto, the East African Community (EAC) chair, announced a decision to merge two peace initiatives, the Nairobi and Luanda peace processes, into a single African-led mediation framework supported by the African Union to improve coordination to advance peace efforts in the eastern DR Congo after co-chairing a virtual extraordinary joint summit on EAC and SADC.

President Mnangagwa and Ruto welcomed progress from US and Qatari complementary diplomatic initiatives which are also in motion. President Mnangagwa’s impartial role in fronting peace efforts in the eastern DR Congo has been widely praised with Rwanda’s Foreign Affairs Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe commending him for providing exceptional leadership as the chair of SADC.

“I commend Zimbabwe’s leadership, as you concluded your chairmanship, of the Southern African Development Community, and the successful hosting of the EAC-SADC ministerial meeting on the conflict in eastern DRC held on March 20-25,” Nduhungirehe said during the Ministerial Session of the Third Joint Permanent Commission on Cooperation (JPCC) in Kigali between the Zimbabwe and Rwanda where the two countries signed five new agreements on health, police cooperation, energy (renewal) youth affairs and customs information exchange.

Added Nduhungirehe: “In particular, we are encouraged to see a huge momentum behind the principle of African solutions to African problems, as demonstrated by the successful co-hosting of the EAC-SADC co-chairs meeting held in Nairobi last week.”

Not surprising, as he stepped onto the podium to hand over the SADC chairmanship on August 18, President Mnangagwa had a spring in his step obviously cognisant that he delivered during his tenure.

As he handed over the chairmanship to Rajoelina, President Mnangagwa said SADC remained steadfast in its commitment to ensuring peace in eastern DR Congo pointing to the appointment of a panel of mediators during the EAC-SADC joint session in Nairobi, Kenya.

The panel comprises former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo, former Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta, former Central African Republic president Catherine Samba-Panza, former Ethiopian president Sahle-Work Zewde, and former Botswana president Dr Mokgweetsi Masisi.

“We appointed five former Heads of State to facilitate inclusive dialogue, build trust and peace-building initiatives,” President Mnangagwa said.

“We welcome the outcome of the Joint SADC-EAC Summit held earlier this week and the African-led Peace Process, which reinforces our philosophy of African solutions to African problems.”

With President Mnangagwa’s term over, attention has now cast on Rajoelina.

Will he exude similar vigour as President Mnangagwa in the push to finding a lasting solution to the perennial problems besetting the eastern DR Congo?

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One thought on “Rajoelina expected to maintain President Mnangagwa’s Sadc momentum

  1. President Munangagwa is doing well but it must be remembered that for a long time he was under the internship of the late President Mugabe, and therefore credit should just go to Zanu PF. This business of putting to much emphasis on the second republic, second republic is no good. Even the Title Deeds he is now giving out and drawing more people to his side, he should remember it is the late who was hated the most by the western world.Munangagwa did not have to suffer that much,but he very much wants to put a distinction and say they are better than President Mugabe thats not true. We appreciate you very much President Munangagwa and you are also God given to us.

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