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Zimbabwe: An extreme case of bad governance and lawlessness
Farai Maguwu, Civic Alliance for Democracy and Governance (CADEGO)
November 23, 2005

Recently the terms "governance" and "good governance" have become buzz words in development literature. Countries that meet the minimum standards for good governance have been given a right hand of fellowship among the family of nations. Their citizens are treated with honor and dignity and benefit from the global flow of people, goods and services. Governments reputed for good governance can borrow from financial institutions without any difficulty whilst donors and investors assist them with developmental projects and investments. Consequently the industry will expand, rural communities develop faster while the gross domestic product will take an upward trend. Countries such as South Africa, Botswana, Mozambique, Malawi, Kenya, to mention just but a few, are enjoying tremendous economic growth as a result of their commitment to meet the minimum standards for good governance.

Bad governance, on the other hand, is antithetical to good governance. It contradicts and violates most or all the norms and practices of democracy. As good governance attracts rewards and friendship among nations, bad governance, like an epidemic, is shunned by the international community and resented by its own people who must turmoil under the sweltering heat of oppression and tyranny. Bad governance is dealt with harshly by the international community through non – cooperation with the ostracized regime, targeted sanctions, withdrawal of aid, confiscation of properties and funds belonging to prominent members of the regime, closure of foreign owned companies and withdrawal of investment, among others. In short, the above penalties are being meted out on Zimbabwe currently due to the government’s commitment to destructive policies and neglect of the rule of law. The country has been a pariah ever since President Mugabe adopted the scorched – earth policy that saw the government sponsoring vicious scoundrels that went around the country committing heinous crimes in the name of ZANU PF. Indeed grievous crimes were committed at the behest of the government particularly between 2000 and 2003.

In its report issued on 4 July 2000, the European Union Election Observer Mission on the Parliamentary Elections blamed the ruling ZANU PF for using state apparatus to terrorize the opposition members. Below are some excerpts from the report:

The evidence showed that between February and June, ZANU PF was engaged in a systematic campaign of intimidation aimed at crushing support for opposition parties. Key groups of the electorate, whom ZANU PF deemed to be opposition supporters, were targeted by war veterans and other party supporters operating from bases on the white owned farms they had invaded, from militia camps in other rural areas, and from government and party offices in rural towns…thousands of incidents of assault, torture, abduction and rape were recorded. Several prominent MDC organizers were murdered. More than 7,000 teachers fled their homes, forcing 250 primary and secondary schools to close. In campaign speeches, ZANU PF leaders seemed to sanction the use of violence and intimidation against political opponents and contributed substantially to the climate of fear that overshadowed the election campaign. The police frequently witnessed violence and intimidation, but appeared to be under instruction not to intervene.

One of the prominent indicators of good governance is how a country handles the issue of succession. President Mugabe has been in power since independence from Britain in 1980. There are basically two explanations for his continued stay in power. One explanation is given to ZANU PF supporters whilst the other is reserved for his challengers outside his party. The ZANU PF ideology for Mugabe’s overstay in power is that ZANU PF is internally fractured and it is only president Mugabe who can hold the party together. They argue that all the factions in ZANU PF respect Mugabe and hence he can hold them together despite their differences. They don’t comment much about the consequences of having an octogenarian presiding over the affairs of a nation struggling to pull itself out of a bottomless pit of political confusion and economic recession.

However, their argument is a clear testimony that President Mugabe has failed, in 25 years, to groom a successor in his party. This brings us to another level of analysis. Failure by President Mugabe to identify a probable successor in his party means the party lacks credible leaders who can maintain the ZANU PF hegemony in Zimbabwean politics after the decease of Mugabe. It means the party will die and be buried at the Heroes Acre in the grave of Mugabe. Secondly, it means ZANU PF does not have conflict resolution mechanisms and hence is a party of malcontents who are held together due to fear of Mugabe rather than a principled commitment to the party.

The explanation given to Mugabe’s challengers is that Mugabe is there to defend the gains of the liberation war, as well as to bring the revolution to its logical conclusion. They say Mugabe brought independence and must do everything possible to prevent the country from falling into the hands of the former colonial master, Britain. Eldred Masunungure wrote that ‘All evidence suggest the ruling ZANU PF’s almost congenital intolerance of opposition politics in general, and electoral competition in particular. This was starkly and tragically revealed in the aftermath to the 1985 general elections. Instead of celebrating its electoral success, ZANU PF went on an orgy of violence, outraged that PF ZAPU had challenged it in the elections.’1 Mugabe promises terror to any party that opposes him. When the MDC was formed in September 1999 Mugabe put on his warrior attire, affirming, ‘Let the MDC side with Europeans and the British, but we will conquer them together. I am firmly asserting to you that there will never come a day when the MDC will rule this country. Never, ever.’

Good governance has much to do with tolerance, competition and diversity in political opinion. The concept of democracy is inextricably interwoven with good governance. A bad government is intolerant of opposition, undemocratic and fixed in opinion. In Zimbabwe it is tantamount to treason to oppose Mugabe and ZANU PF. To oppose Mugabe and ZANU PF is seen as being ungrateful and disrespectful. Between 2000 and 2003 Education Sport and Culture Minister Aenias Chigwedere told civil servants, particularly teachers, that they are free to join politics but they ‘must be prepared to be bruised in the process’. His statement came in the wake of inroads made by the MDC among the discontented civil servants. Many teachers lost their lives, property and jobs after being labeled MDC supporters. Other areas, particularly Mashonaland East, Central and West, were declared ‘no go’ areas for the opposition supporters. ‘The terror campaign was also directed against teachers and nurses in the rural areas as these people were perceived as possible supporters of the MDC and were likely to have political influence over others.’2 Mugabe’s fear of losing power is at the heart of Zimbabwe’s plunge. It is a one man socio-economic earthquake.

The way Mugabe handled the 2000 general election left his image tattered as a respected statesman. It clearly showed that participation in Zimbabwean politics is only tolerated if done within ZANU PF and with the blessing of Mugabe. The Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 was the United States’ reaction to the government’s onslaught on democracy. Under this act the U.S government stops giving direct aid to the government of Zimbabwe until the government is committed to the rule of law, free and fair elections, control of the police and military by civilian authorities and an equitable, legal, and transparent land reform program. On the 2nd of November 2005 the U.S. ambassador to Zimbabwe, Christopher Dell, reiterated that his country takes great exception to the government’s Machiavellian style of leadership: ‘Sanctions on specific high level individuals and their families, are the vehicle that the United States and like-minded countries use to signal international disapproval of the way that Zimbabwe’s ruling elite has trampled on democratic freedoms.’3

Good governance has 8 major characteristics. These are participation, rule of law, transparency, responsiveness, consensus oriented, equity and inclusiveness, effectiveness and efficiency, and accountability. This articles looks at the level of participation Zimbabweans enjoy in politics and decision making.

Participation
Every citizen has the right to participate in decision making directly or through representatives. However, where critical issues are decided the citizens must be given the chance to express their opinions through consultations or referendums. In Zimbabwe this was done only once, that was in February 2000 when the government was roundly defeated in a constitutional referendum. To date the government has amended the constitution a record seventeen times without consulting its citizens. The contentious re-establishment of the Senate was never put to the public for approval, let alone public debate. Majority of the citizens feel the senate is excess garbage for a government that always pleads poverty when challenged to address the biting economic hardships that has reduced its people to ‘stone age scavengers.’

If people had been given a chance to air their views they would have rejected Senate since it does not answer their socio-economic problems. The people of Zimbabwe would dismiss the argument that says Senate would introduce mature debates on national issues due to the age limit placed on senators. Zimbabweans would argue that if age makes one a good leader how come we have arguably the oldest president in the world who has nothing to show for his ‘mature’ age. Instead he is ranked by many schools of thought as being one of the worst leaders this century has had, terrorizing more than 6million of his people into exile whilst close to 13 million continue sitting in the valley of the shadow of death – No food, drugs, fuel, employment etc. If the people are consulted, their ideas taken into consideration, Zimbabwe could be in a respectable state today. But alas, we have a government of the government, by the government and for the government.

The government is guilty of trying to silence civil society. As the 1990s decade came to a close, there was growing concern with the ever worsening living standards in Zimbabwe. The MDC was formed in the context of the burgeoning of space for civil society that was rising to fill the gap left void by the absence of credible opposition. Civil society was agitating for freedom of expression, association, movement and freedom from torture. Demand for these freedoms intensified as we approached year 2000. "But, starting in the year 2000, particularly after the defeat of the government sponsored constitutional referendum in February (2000), the ZANU PF regime went on a concerted effort to close the space for freedom of expression, association, movement, and from torture."4

The government shut its ears to criticism from both within and outside. It went to an extend of attempting to close down all NGOs suspected of being sympathetic to the MDC. The much condemned NGO bill acrimoniously passed through the ZANU PF dominated legislature and could have become law had Mugabe not bowed to pressure. Nevertheless, the government has unleashed a reign of terror on dissenting civic society organizations. Its intolerance to civil society was epitomized by the passage of two draconian laws, the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) and the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). Some clauses of POSA outlaw meetings of more than two people without being authorized by the police four days in advance. Other clauses make it a criminal act to criticize President Mugabe, his wife, the government, police and the army. "Indeed POSA amounted to a state of emergency without one being declared.’5 Many have been prosecuted for criticizing Mugabe.

Under POSA it is an offense to demonstrate without police clearance. This clearance is hard, if not impossible, to come by if the demonstration is not in favor of the ruling party, government or Mugabe. Many civic leaders such as ZCTU leaders Wellington Chibhebhe, Lovemore Matombo, Lucia Matibenga, NCA chairperson Lovemore Madhuku and his colleagues, MDC leaders and their supporters, Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), and several others, have been arrested and detained for several days and released without being charged under POSA. Zimbabwean laws are being twisted by the ZANU PF regime to stifle democracy. Recently the ZANU PF dominated parliament passed the seventeenth amendment bill to the constitution of Zimbabwe. The bill makes it unlawful for anyone to sue the government for land expropriated by the state under the chaotic land reform exercise. Once more, the government shut its ears to the voice of reason from civil society.

More than hundred members of the legal profession petitioned the parliament of Zimbabwe to stop passing this bill. Among other vices within the bill, they observed that ‘the amendment effectively usurps the authority of the courts of Zimbabwe by denying the people of Zimbabwe recourse to the law in challenging State action which violates fundamental human rights. This puts paid to the principle of separation of powers, by allowing the executive to initiate, implement and adjudicate upon its own actions ensuring that the State will not be scrutinized nor its actions reviewed by an independent and impartial tribunal.’6

Despite the wise petition from members of the legal profession, the government of Zimbabwe went ahead to sign the 17th amendment bill into law. The government seems not prepared to listen to any who do not fall within its ranks. Church advices have been falling on deaf ears, with Mugabe telling church leaders to leave politics to the politicians. Thus participating in decision-making in Zimbabwe is a preserve of the few who claim to know what the people want. The situation is distressing. The government is divorced from the people it rules, always making laws and policies that hurt its population, and leading to further deterioration of living conditions. As all this is happening, Mugabe continues to tell the world that Zimbabweans are a ‘happy lot’.

How can Zimbabweans be a ‘happy lot’ when the future under Mugabe is gloomy and dreary? How can young people be happy when the future promises them unemployment, further isolation from the international community, homelessness, severe police and military brutality, repression and a collapsed health delivery system. How can they be happy in a country where education mean little to a government that pays degreed teachers an equivalent of US $35 per month!

If government performance is going to improve there is an urgent need to give civil society space in decision – making. The primitive notion of understanding democracy as a mandate to make laws and decisions for the people, without consulting them, must pave way for the modern concept of participatory democracy where civil society continues to participate in decision making despite the existence of an elected government. The United Nations Under-Secretary General and Special Adviser on Africa, Ambassador Ibrahim Gambari, pointed out that civil society is the pulse of democracy:

When public trust is abused and national resources are wasted through corruption and maladministration, members of civil societies, and in particular, the poor and unemployed suffer the consequences. Consequently, it is in the interests of civil society to ensure that public officials manage these resources in an efficient, transparent and accountable fashion. Furthermore, civil society plays a critical role in strengthening democracy in that, it has capacity to bring about the movement from a bureaucratic to a more representative administration by providing a credible bridge between the rulers and the citizens. Civil societies help to build social capital by enhancing security, building trust and creating organizational capacity.7

Electoral Participation
Under the Zimbabwean constitution anyone above the age of 18 has the right to vote. Although voting is by secret ballot many in rural communities do not believe that their vote is a secret due to heavy electoral misinformation peddled by ZANU PF activists in rural areas. Rural voters are told by ZANU PF activists that there are hidden cameras in every polling booth that record which party a person voted for. Illiteracy, intimidation and post-election violence is exploited to the full by ZANU PF activists in rural communities. In Mutasa District, Manicaland, ZANU PF activists went around villages demanding ZANU PF T shirts from supposed MDC supporters after the March 31 poll accusing them of voting for the MDC. Asked how they knew where these people had casts their vote, they claimed that hidden cameras had revealed this to them. These activities took place in Kudumba, Rashama, Kadzere, Duri and Mudzindiko villages. The effect of this misinformation and intimidation is in two ways. Either people refrain from voting or they vote for ZANU PF under duress.

The General Laws Amendment Act of 2002 saw the government reversing one the significant gains of independence: universal suffrage. The act excludes from voting Zimbabweans holding two passports and outlaws postal voting. This means more than 5 million Zimbabweans living in the Diaspora can not exercise their right to vote. The Act was nullified by a High Court ruling only to be effected through a statutory instrument. Furthermore the Act restricts people to vote in constituencies where they are registered, meaning tens of thousands of students are disenfranchised if the ballot is held when they are at college.

Added to restrictive legislation is the ruling party’s proneness to violence during elections. On political violence Masipula Sithole made the following observation:

Often the so-called war veterans and ZANU PF youth militias have disrupted lawful meetings of opposition parties; interfered with the movement of citizens by placing road blocks, demanding ZANU PF party cards and confiscating their identity cards. But worst of all, incidents of physical torture and rape have risen to alarming proportions in recent months. The Zimbabwe Human Rights Trust registered in 2001 41 politically motivated killings, 307 abductions with a political background, 2100 cases of torture and 1000 cases of illegal custody.8

Political violence is against gender balance in politics as it effectively shuts women out of politics, both as voters and candidates. If women are gang raped by state sponsored thugs for supporting an opposition political party they will develop an indifferent attitude to politics. For this reason women in Zimbabwe feel insecure to discuss politics in public. Government must protect the right of women to participate in politics by doing everything possible to stop political violence.

Conclusion
This article discussed one aspect of democratic governance: participation. Zimbabwe, celebrating twenty five years of independence and democracy, ironically falls short of this golden standard of a true democracy. The Zimbabwe government continues to rule with an iron fist, closing any space available for civil society participation through enactment of primitive and archaic laws such as POSA and AIPPA. The political playing field is still gender biased with little room for women participation. At present, Zimbabwe seems to be the only African country drifting eastwards where democracy is anathema whilst the rest of the continent seems to be heeding the call to democratize. However hope is not lost on Zimbabwe as civil society, despite the many political challenges it faces under Mugabe’s repressive regime, continues to be the voice crying in the wilderness: But let justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream!

*Farai Maguwu is National Coordinator for Civic Alliance for Democracy and Governance (CADEGO)


1. Masunungure E, 2003, The travails of opposition politics in Zimbabwe since independence, in ZIMBABWE: The Past is the Future, Weaver Press, Harare.
2. Feltoe, G, 2000, The onslaught against democracy and the rule of law in Zimbabwe. http://www.Irf.co.zw
3. A paper presented at Africa University entitled: Plain Talk About the Zimbabwean Economy, 2 November 2005. A few days later Mugabe promised the ambassador that 'he will see hell in one of these days'.
4. Sithole, M and Mair, S., 2002, Blocked Democracies In Africa: Case of Zimbabwe, Konrad Adenauer, Stiftung, Harare.
5. Masunungure, E, 2003, op cit ft 183.
6. Zimbabwe Independent, August 12, 2005.
7. Gambari, I., 2004, Tackling marginalization of Africa in the age of Globalisation: The role of NEPAD/ African Union. A paper presented at the graduation ceremony of Africa University, Mutare, Zimbabwe.

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