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Inclusive government - Index of articles
Kadoma
declaration
CHIPAWO
February 26, 2010
Tonight I have electricity,
returned after a cut that lasted from about 3pm yesterday to 11am
this morning. But I shall only be cooking a very light meal. I had
a wonderful lunch at the Rainbow Towers in Harare.
The story behind
the free lunch is the story of the struggle in Zimbabwe to get Government,
Employers and Workers round the table, get them to agree and above
all get them to implement their agreement. It is a long and depressing
one, the story not the lunch. But the formation of the inclusive
government created conditions far more conducive for agreement and
implementation than ever before.
The parties that make
up the inclusive government are now more or less the political expression
of economic interests in the country. In other words, the inclusivity
at the political level promotes partnership at the economic level.
And just as inclusivity at the political level is proving tricky
though actually quite miraculous, so the discussions in the town
of Kadoma where at the tripartite level the 'social partners' met
to try again , assisted by the International Labour Organisation
(ILO) and other parties.
The partners
identified the high Country Risk Factor (CRF) as the focus for their
discussions as to how best they can work together to improve the
situation in Zimbabwe. The document is amazingly frank, the admissions
amazingly self,critical. The Kadoma Declaration is a document that
could never have emerged in Zimbabwe until now. It was signed. The
parties ratified and today, 26th February, 2010, at the Harare International
Conference Centre, in the presence of the President, Robert Mugabe,
and the Prime Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, the Kadoma Declaration
was launched.
CHIPAWO was
approached around midday on Tuesday with a request to come up with
a short play on the theme of 'Unity for Development'. We ransacked
the declaration for material, invented a family and a situation
and by that evening there was a script. The actors, chosen from
the CHIPAWO Youth Programme, convened on the morning of the following
day. By the next day, they knew their words. A delegation from the
Ministry of Labour came to view it, gave it the thumbs up and Friday
morning, this morning, it was presented at the launch to great enthusiasm.
These young actors are extraordinary.
I am copying
the script below because it probably gives a more readable idea
of what the Kadoma Declaration was all about, and the amazing fact!
There is no idea (barring greetings, comic business and the like)
that is not virtually paraphrased from the document. It might give
you a slightly different impression of what is happening in Zimbabwe
than you are used to.
CHIPAWO
play script come together
CAST Va Phiri,
father, employee Amai Ruvimbo, mother, housewife Washington, big
brother, university graduate, Ministry of finance Ruvimbo, big sister,
university graduate, /businesswoman Runyararo and Psychology, younger
children of Va Phiri's deceased brother in the diaspora
Stage is set with table
and two chairs up left. Armchair down and slightly in front of table.
Sofa centre and armchair centre right. Television set on small table
down left. The furniture is stylised, wooden and brightly painted.
1.Theme Song
for ILO @ 90, choreography
2. Social dialogue
sequence at the end of the dance the worker, the government employee
and the businesswoman snap into position , government in the middle
centre stage, facing downstage, businesswoman at his shoulder on
the left, facing left, worker at his right shoulder, facing right.
The dialogue and moves are crisp and machine-like.
Washington:
I am the government. Ruvimbo: I am an employer. VaPhiri: I am a
worker. Ruvimbo: I am in business to make profit. VaPhiri: I need
to earn a living wage. Ruvimbo: The more I pay him, the less my
profit. VaPhiri: The more profit he makes, the less he pays us.
Washington: I have to govern these two , the employer who wants
to make a profit and the worker who wants to earn more money. If
I support business, the worker complains. If I support the worker,
the employer complains. All three: It's an impossible situation.
Amai Ruvimbo: Talk to each other. Work together. Three actors come
together in impassioned mimed discussion. Freeze.
Narrator:
Social dialogue
3. In the family
Ruvimbo and Washington exit. VaPhiri and Amai Ruvimbo go to sit
on sofa. Amai Ruvimbo is lounging luxuriously. The two children
are sitting at the table upstage doing their homework.
Narrator:
The Phiri family at home. Va Phiri , head of the house and employee
in a local packaging company. Amai Ruvimbo , his wife and a worker
in her own house, in other words, a housewife. Runyararo and Psychology
, the children of Va Phiri's younger brother who left for greener
pastures in the UK.
VaPhiri:
Mai Ruvimbo, the way you are sitting there you would think you were
the worker and I was the one who stayed at home all day.
Amai
Ruvimbo: But I am the worker. It is not only you men who
go off to work every day on your bicycles that are workers. Do you
think I spend the whole day here at home sitting on this sofa?
Runyararo
(comes up to Va Phiri holding out a card):
Babamkuru, look what daddy sent us.
VaPhiri: admires it. Amai
Ruvimbo looks the other way.
Amai
Ruvimbo (disparagingly): It was empty?
VaPhiri:
What do you mean it was empty?
Runyararo:
I know, Babamkuru, Amaguru means there was no money with it. There
was no money but there was a very nice video game!
The children laugh and
celebrate.
Amai
Ruvimbo: (getting up and going over to restore order) You
two get on with your homework.
(to Va Phiri) I have to see that the children are educated and clothed.
I have to see the rent is paid. I have to see that food is on the
table. (summons up the courage) I want to try my hand at cross,border
trading.
VaPhiri:
And get into those big trucks and travel around with those men!
Those women are immoral. And in any case if you do, who will look
after the children.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Then, when will the poverty end?
At that moment her big
son, Washington, enters.
Narrator:
VaPhiri's son, Washington, university graduate and rising star in
the Ministry of Finance.
Greets his parents.
VaPhiri:
How's work, my son?
Washington:
(resignedly) Well, you know, atata, It's a struggle.
Amai
Ruvimbo: When are you going to leave the civil service
and get a proper job, one that pay you a decent salary?
Washington:
(humouring her) OK, amai, I'll do that someday, don't worry.
Amai
Ruvimbo: You better do it soon, son. How can you support
a family on those peanuts they give you.
Psychology
(leaning forward over his books) Do they give you peanuts, Washie?
You know what my friend told me at school, if you pay peanuts you
get monkeys. Are you a monkey?
Washington jokingly runs
after him.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Washington, leave Psychology alone and let him
do his work.
There is a noise outside.
VaPhiri: (cocking his
head): Someone coming.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Must be Vimbi.
Narrator:
Ruvimbo, VaPhiri:'s son, university graduate, an ambitious businesswoman.
Amai Ruvimbo gets up
and goes to greet her. Ruvimbo is smartly dressed in an executive
slack suit. They come in together. They greet. One can see that
Ruvimbo is agitated.
Amai
Ruvimbo: What's wrong, my child? Are you OK?
Ruvimbo bursts out.
Ruvimbo:
No, I'm NOT OK. How CAN I be OK? (quieter but exasperated) Did you
read the papers today? This is meant to be an INCLUSIVE government
but the one paper is calling the other side THUGS and the other
paper is calling other side PUPPETS and even government officials
clash with each other. If we don't make this thing work, we will
be out of business.
Washington: O, so business
is not good?
Ruvimbo:
(exasperatedly to Washington) My god, you're a one to ask.
How can it with you guys mismanaging the economy the way you do
and killing off any chance of a conducive environment for business
and investment.
Washington: Well, we
are responsible for creating this exclusive government in the first
place, aren't we? Look, sisi, I know you will just say it's party
political propaganda but do you REALLY think that sanctions have
got nothing to do with this?
Ruvimbo: Hell, Washie!
there's NO sanctions. You're just using it as an excuse for your
bungling.
Washington: NO SANCTIONS!
What planet do you live on?
Va Phiri, who has been
following this interchange with great attention and eager to get
his bit in, eagerly leaps to his feet. As he speaks, his wife, AMAI
RUVIMO, expresses her vociferous agreement)
VaPhiri:
Mwanagu, please, don't believe that stuff about targeted sanctions.
That's rubbish. If the sanctions are targeted, they are targeted
at me, at you, at all of us. All of us are suffering from those
sanctions. (conceding) I think the government was right doing what
it did to try and take the economy away from the whites and bring
it into the hands of Zimbabweans BUT (his main point) there are
too many people messing everything up with their corruption. Good
policies, mwanangu, but not properly er (looks for the word)É
Ruvimbo: Implemented.
VaPhiri: (seizing the
word): Eyi, implementing. And too much corruption.
Ruvimbo: No, sorry, atata,
BAD policies, BAD implementation. It's all a bloody mess. And when
they do have a good policy, they take such a long bloody time to
implement that by the time they come up with the inputs the rainy
season is over!
Washington: OK, if I
say something of what you say is true, will you agree with me about
foreign interference and sanctions.
Ruvimbo: Corruption is
Zimbabwean sanctions, Washy.
VaPhiri:
(not quite happy at being left out) Hey, hey, this is not
the University of Zimbabwe! You argue about which it is , sanctions,
corruption, poor policy etc etc. Whatever! What are you going to
do about it? (to his son and daughter) Chigarai pasi! (Just sit
down, you two.) It's long, my children. It's long that we've suffered.
While you two talk, there are no jobs, those with jobs are lucky
if they get a salary. I am worried, my children, that even me, after
thirty six years, even me I can lose my job tomorrow or if I keep
the job I work for no salary. At all.
Amai
Ruvimbo: There's food but who has the money to buy it.
VaPhiri:
No inflation but no money.
Washington:
(providing the technical term) Stagflation.
The children have stopped
doing their work and now they are standing looking at them in wonder.
Runyararo:
And we have teachers but they don't teach.
Runyararo: Yet they
are sending our friends away from school because they can't pay
fees.
Runyararo: Fees for teachers
who don't teach?
Runyararo: Atata, Amama,
we don't understand.
Runyararo: We don't understand.
Help us.
Runyararo: Help us!
Amai
Ruvimbo: You, two, keep out of it. Have you finished
your homework. Even if your teachers are not teaching, you still
have to do homework.
The children pretend
to go back to their homework
(to the others) I don't
care what you say. It is all the government's fault. Sorry, my son.
Ruvimbo: You are right,
amama. Government is completely dysfunctional.
VaPhiri:
Talk Chichewa if you can't talk English.
Ruvimbo: Government doesn't
work, atata. Ayigwiri nchito.
Washington: Who can function
if they are not being paid?
VaPhiri:
It's not like there is no money at all. Some people are getting
rich.
Washington: Like sisi
here. She says business is bad but you want to see her filling her
trolley at that luxury supermarket in Mount Pleasant. Not to mention
the metal parked outside.
Runyararo:
(mocking her sister and acting our a luxury car) B...MÉW!
Psychology:
(adding his bit) Be My Wife!
Ruvimbo: You're just
jealous, all of you. There would be money for everyone if you guys
got your act together. Just as things are settling down and we are
building confidence again one of you people opens his big mouth
and we are back to square one.
VaPhiri:
She's right. It's funny. They are in the same government but when
they open their mouths to speak, each one talks a different language.
You don't know who to believe.
Washington:
If we were left to ourselves we would be alright but there are too
many people out there pulling strings, too much foreign interference
and too many puppets.
Ruvimbo: There we go
again!
Psychology (desperate
to chip in): We have been learning about human rights at school.
Maybe that could be a problem.
Runyararo: Especially
children's rights, atata , we have a right to education, you know.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Hey, imi, I said do your homework! (to the others)
So what's the answer? Can't you university graduates come to an
agreement and solve the problem. You've been talking for hours.
Runyararo: And I'm hungry.
Runyararo: So am I.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Homework! (to the others) They're right. What's
the problem?
Ruvimbo: It's called
the Country Risk Factor (CRF).
Runyararo: Can't resist
food.
Ruvimbo: What do you
mean?
Runyararo:
CRF, can't resist food!
They break up in laughter
and Sisi comes round with dish and water to wash hands.
During this
sequence each speaker comes down to the audience and speaks, almost
like talking to themselves, thinking.
Ruvimbo: How to get them
to understand? The CRF is no laughing matter. It's something that's
making it almost impossible to revive business. Unless we address
it, the economy is going to stay depressed forever. Doing business
with the outside world is almost impossible. Money keeps leaving
the country and there are no credit lines to fuel production. Look,
right now industries have collapsed and those that are operating
are producing at low capacity. As atata says, there are no jobs
or jobs with no salary. All our best brains are leaving and it's
hard to find anyone with the qualifications to do the job these
days.
VaPhiri:
So that is what they call it , 'Country Risk Factor'. They
can call it what they like but it is a fact that more and more ordinary
people are becoming paupers while some are getting richer and richer.
Look at the way crime is going up. If it's the 'Country Risk Factor'
that's doing all this to us, then (as in the revolutionary slogan)
'Pasi nayo!' (Down with it!).
Amai
Ruvimbo: Look at the way our girls are earning
a living these days. Why sell tomatoes or newspapers when a man
can pay you a month's salary for one night on your back! And look
at the stories we hear about people trying to visit their families
in places like the UK. If they are lucky enough to get a visa, they
are treated like animals at the airport when they get there, so
they say.
Ruvimbo:
I am a businesswoman , quite a successful one at that. I am ready
to expand. I want to do business outside my country. Do you have
any idea what it is like trying to convince people out there that
they can safely do business with a Zimbabwean?
Washington:
I still say it's sanctions and foreign interference.
Enter a child, singing.
We are the future We
are the children etc.
Other children enter
and join in the singing, ending on 'Let's start giving.'
Runyararo:
And let's start talking -
Runyararo: and working
together.
Runyararo: We are the
future.
Runyararo: We are the
voice of the future.
Children:
And we say -
Runyararo:
To our fathers and mothers
Runyararo: To our big
brothers and sisters.
Children:
Come together.
Runyararo: Let's be
as one.
Runyararo: For the sake
of your children.
Runyararo:
For the sake of -
All:
- the future.
The children
take the family members, workers (VaPhiri and Amai
Ruvimbo), government official, businesswoman, and bring them together.
All: Social dialogue.
Narrator:
To reduce our country's risk factor.
Runyararo: And improve
its image.
All: The Kadoma Declaration!
Song:
(Shona) Ngatibatanei (Let us come together) Sibemweya mumwe (Let
us be as one( Tivake nyika yedu (Let us build our natio) Tifanane
nenjiva. (Let us be like doves.)
(Ndebele) Asibambaneni
Sibe moyamunye Sakh' isizwe sethu Sifanane namajuba.
Amai
Ruvimbo: Hey, you two, have you finished your homework!
Visit the CHIPAWO
fact
sheet
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