|
| WORKING FOR PEACE | |
| December 27, 1996 |
||
![]() |
|
|
|
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Next, Charlayne Hunter-Gault concludes her series on the origin of the crises in Central Africa. She talks with Julius Nyerere, a key figure in efforts to bring peace to the region. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Julius K. Nyerere, the 74-year-old former president of Tanzania and one of Africa's most respected elder statesmen, led his country to an independence in 1961 and presided over it until 1985. Searching for a development path for his dirt-poor country, he introduced a governing concept that was meant to meld socialism with traditional tribal government. He called it "Ujamaa," Swahili for familyhood. |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Rwanda and Burundi. | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
OLARA OTUNNU, International Peace Academy: Very few leaders understand as deeply the roots, the evolution, the nature of the conflict in the Great Lakes as he does. Very few leaders have ideas about what to do about it as he does, and very few leaders have the influence that he has within that sub-region. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: We met Nyerere during a recent visit to New York and asked first about Rwanda, and the prospects for reconciliation there. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Are African government in which--in countries where these militia people are hiding now prepared to hand them over? JULIUS NYERERE: Well, so far, they're not handing them over. Some are in Africa. Some are not in Africa. Some are in Europe, and it's just possible some may be outside Europe. We all have a responsibility to hand over these people. This is an essential element in the reconciliation of the peoples of Rwanda. I hope that will happen. JULIUS NYERERE: Well, the main problem is a problem of power. In Rwanda, you had a majority in power. You have these divisions called Tutsi, Hutu, and in Rwanda, you had the Hutu in power, and the minority Tutsi excluded. In Burundi, it was the other way around. You had the minority Tutsis in power, and the majority excluded. And this is--this is the problem we have to deal with, that power, really virtually since independence has been in the hands of the minority, supported by the army. And that is really basically the problem we are dealing with. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: What would the solution be? JULIUS NYERERE: The solution will be a reconciliation. We'll have--we will have to negotiate a system under which both the majority and the minority feel reasonably happy. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: What's the biggest obstacle? |
||||||||||||||||||||
| The
biggest obstacle. |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
JULIUS NYERERE: Well, the biggest obstacle at present is that those who are in power, the minority--the minority is in power--they are like one riding on the back of a tiger. And they really want almost a water-tight assurance before they get off the back of the tiger because they feel if they get off the back of the tiger-- CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: It will eat them. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: The African governments in the region, you've been working with the leaders there, and they have imposed sanctions on Burundi. Has this had any effect? JULIUS NYERERE: Leaders of the region are absolutely united on this one, and the significance of this is sometimes lost in the outside world. The outside world regards Africa as military rule and--and dictatorships by single-party system. My system was single-party system. But they don't realize the significance of what has taken place in East Africa. These leaders who met in Arusha were really saying to the military regime in Burundi we can no longer accept military rule on our borders. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: And this is a major change. JULIUS NYERERE: This is a major change on the continent, and I really hope that the significance will be the allies outside Africa. JULIUS NYERERE: Well, I mean, this is not simply in this region. It's everywhere. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: In the world. JULIUS NYERERE: In the world. It's not simply us; it's everywhere. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: It's not ethnic. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: You mentioned the one-party rule in your country where you were president for four terms during which time you promoted the principle of "Ujamaa," socialism, and you have acknowledged that it was a miserable failure. What lessons, in retrospect, do you draw from that and the kind of economies that African countries might more profitably pursue? JULIUS NYERERE: Where did you get the idea that I thought "Ujamaa" was a miserable failure? JULIUS NYERERE: A bunch of countries were in economic shambles at the end of the 70s. They are not socialists. Now, today it needs so much courage to talk about socialism, therefore, perhaps we should change the phraseology, but you have to take in the values of socialism which we were trying to build in Tanzania in any society. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: And those values are what? CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: So what's the answer? Because, with all due respect, the economy of Tanzania did not thrive under the socialism that you practiced. So what is the--what do you see as the answer for African countries which are still predominantly poor? JULIUS NYERERE: The problem is not a question of socialism. You have to deal with the problem of poverty. You have to deal with the problem of poverty in your country, and your country is not socialist, or we're in trouble. People in rich countries don't realize the responsibility of handling poverty in countries like mine. But those countries will develop. Countries in Africa are poor, both capitalists and socialists, and today we don't have a single one with these socialists. |
||||||||||||||||||||
| The colonial legacy. | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
JULIUS NYERERE: Well, I'm saying some of the problems we are now handling in Africa, some of the mess we're trying to clean up in the continent we have inherited, the mess of the borders we have inherited. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: The colonials who-- JULIUS NYERERE: The colonial-- CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: The colonial powers drew the borders. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Does that include the leader of Zaire, Mobutu Seseseko? JULIUS NYERERE: Well, I didn't say so. JULIUS NYERERE: When we have African problems, we, ourselves, have a duty to solve our problems. I think we must accept that. When you have African problems, we should try on our own to solve those problems. We would prefer the outside world to keep out. If we want help, we can seek for help. But do you realize sometimes we ask for help, and it doesn't come. On the 5th of last month our leaders met in Nairobi, and if said need an external--we need a force to go into Zaire to help the refugees to come back. It's not happening. And we appealed to the United Nations to establish that force, and we said we would also be participating in that force. Well, quite frankly, this is not happening. What is happening is a kind of self-help within Eastern Zaire, itself. And the refugees are going back. I hope--I think the lesson which Africa should draw from that is that they should rely upon themselves to the maximum when it comes to dealing with African problems. CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Well, Mwalimu Nyerere, thank you.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station. | ||
| PBS Online Privacy Policy Copyright ©1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved. | ||