The best Zimbabwe news site on the world wide web 
 
NEWS
FORUMS
NEWS ANALYSIS
READERS' FORUM

CARTOON

BRITISH FOREIGN OFFICE

NEWS
Zimbabwe/SA spy case marks historic tensions


Zimbabwe spies jail for 6 years

Zimbabwe spies held in South Africa

'I spied on Mugabe for South Africa'

Zimbabwe spies plead for leniency

Zimbabwe 'softens' SA spy with torture

How Zimbabwe nabbed South African spy

SA mum as spy held in Zimbabwe

SA dragged into Zimbabwe spy scandal

Dear George: Our readers adress Mugabe's minion

Sling your hook Charamba!

Mugabe's spokesman threatens New Zimbabwe.com

Goche, Chombo caught in spy ring

Zimbabwe tails 2 ministers in spy probe

Chiyangwa has case to answer - magistrate

Court to decide on Chiyangwa remand

Chiyangwa tortured, suffered stroke - lawyer

Chiyangwa appears in court on espionage charge

Chiyangwa alive, to appear in court - report

Fears for Chiyangwa as he fails to appear in court

Chiyangwa said dead, family says he is 'fine'

Mugabe's nephew held for espionage in Zim

Chiyangwa held by secret service

By Agencies

THE espionage case in which three Zimbabweans were jailed this week for selling state secrets to South Africa has underlined a historical tension between the two neighbours, according to analysts.

The three informants, convicted of breaching Zimbabwe's Official Secrets Act, were this week sentenced to between five and six years in prison by a regional magistrate in the capital, Harare.

Zimbabwe's ambassador-designate to Mozambique, Godfrey Dzvairo, was slapped with an effective six years behind bars, while ZANU-PF director for external affairs Itai Marchi and former Metropolitan Bank company secretary Tendai Matambanadzo were each jailed for five years. Philip Chiyangwa, a ZANU-PF legislator and President Robert Mugabe's nephew, is awaiting trial on similar charges.

Historical and ideological differences have characterised the relationship between South Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC) and ZANU-PF.

"Traditionally, ZANU has always been an ally of [South Africa's] Pan Africanist Congress, while the ANC had been an ally of PF-ZAPU [ZANU's uneasy partner during the liberation war]," former government minister and Matabeleland North governor, Welshman Mabhena, told IRIN.

As Zimbabwe's political and economic crisis unfolded in 2000, with controversial legislative elections and a violent land distribution programme, South Africa found itself with limited intelligence and influence.

"The ANC had to gather information through covert means to understand the developments within the ZANU-PF," said Chris Maroleng, an analyst with South Africa's Institute for Security Studies.

South Africa needed information to assess whether "progressive forces open to engagement" within the Zimbabwean ruling party were in the ascendant, which would help them in their talks to resolve the political standoff with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, said Maroleng.

"This [espionage] trial [exposed] that the relationship between the two governments has never been as sound as portrayed," noted Mabhena. "The Zimbabwean government has obviously been misleading the South Africans about the so-called peace talks with the opposition and, in the process, leading the ANC leadership up the garden path." - IRIN
JOIN THE DEBATE ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEWZIMBABWE.COM FORUMS
newsdesk@newzimbabwe.com


All material copyright newzimbabwe.com
Material may be published or reproduced in any form with appropriate credit to this website