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ZIMBABWE:
"Third way" runs into criticism
IRIN News
August 31, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48847
BULAWAYO - Reviled
by both sides of the political divide in Zimbabwe, sacked information
minister Jonathan Moyo is back at the centre of controversy, promoting
a "third way" to break the logjam between the ruling party and its
main opposition.
Moyo, the only independent candidate to win a seat in the parliamentary
elections in March, argues that his United People's Movement (UPM)
offers an alternative to ZANU-PF's 25-year grip on power, and the
labour-backed Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has lost
three elections in a row since 2000, in ballots many regard as rigged.
Although the initiative has stirred discussion in a country suffering
triple-digit inflation, food shortages, savage unemployment and
critical foreign exchange shortages, the debate remains coloured
by the image of Moyo himself - first a staunch former critic of
the government, then one of its most ardent ministers, now a new
party leader.
According to Moyo, the UPM is a "synthesis of the dialectic between
ZANU-PF and the MDC", and an idea that has attracted disgruntled
elements in both parties. The goals of the "third way" are to provide
"a pragmatic ideological and policy alternative" for charting a
way out of Zimbabwe's crisis, and to "succeed where the MDC has
failed".
"As a sunset political party going through an inevitably bitter
[internal] succession struggle, ZANU-PF no longer has the capacity
to govern, and govern well," Moyo told IRIN. The MDC, on the other
hand, believes "it can come to power on the strength of protest
votes produced by the ineptitude and brutality of the ZANU-PF",
but had become "trapped by the web of protest politics".
However, University of Zimbabwe political scientist John Makumbe
commented that what Zimbabwe needed most at present was political
dialogue between the MDC and ZANU-PF - not the introduction of more
parties.
"Currently there is so much polarisation in Zimbabwe, there can
only be two horses in the political field, which are ZANU-PF and
the MDC - there is no space for the so-called third way," said Makumbe.
"Jonathan Moyo must not fool himself into thinking that he can win
the people's support," Makumbe added. "His brutality against progressive
forces, and his unbridled hate for opposition politicians, is well
documented."
As information minister for five years, Moyo was an abrasive defender
of the government, and spearheaded the draconian Access to Information
and Protection of Privacy Act: legislation for controlling the media
that has seen the arrest of more than 100 journalists and the closure
of four private newspapers in the past four years.
Moyo has, however, attracted audiences when he has spoken publically
about the third way, winning applause, especially from college students.
His willingness to stand up to ZANU-PF after being sacked in 2005
for his role in organising resistance to President Robert Mugabe's
succession plans has earned him the admiration of some Zimbabweans.
But for civil society activists and past opponents, like National
Constitutional Assembly Chairman Lovemore Madhuku, the third way
initiative is tainted by association with Moyo.
"Little is known about it and if it is a credible movement at all,
it can only succeed when reputable people take charge, and not the
likes of Moyo - he has no credibility with the people, who justifiably
dismiss him as a disillusioned former ZANU-PF die-hard," said Madhuku.
Thokozani Sibanda, a civic activist, wondered aloud, "What is it
that the MDC has failed to do, that Moyo and his UPM think they
will achieve?"
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