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Zimbabwe pro-democracy activist denies mimicking Mugabe
ZimOnline
May 31, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=12197
Harare - In
a flagrant style that must have left President Robert Mugabe green
with envy, lawyer Lovemore Madhuku and other leaders of Zimbabwe's
National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA) last weekend chopped and changed
the constitution of the country's largest pro-democracy group so
they could retain its control. While Madhuku - who is NCA chairman
- has argued that the amendment of the constitution was legal, his
civic society allies as well as critics in the government are both
agreed that the manipulation of the NCA's constitution during a
violent annual general meeting last Saturday could only have left
the organisation weaker and without moral authority to demand a
new and democratic constitution for Zimbabwe. On Tuesday Zim Online
spoke to Madhuku about this and other issues. Excerpts:
QUESTION:
Many people including your allies in civic society say you are power-hungry,
that you pushed - President Mugabe-style - for the NCA constitution
to be changed so you could remain in office, what is your comment?
ANSWER:
Those are very unfortunate comments. They arise from a misunderstanding
of what we stand for and what is involved in the struggle for a
new constitution. It would be very wrong to equate the processes
that we are currently engaged in with the processes of what the
government is doing.
Q:
But the point is that by pushing for the old NCA constitution to
be changed so you could remain in office, you have forfeited whatever
moral authority you had to lead the search for a new and democratic
constitution for Zimbabwe?
A:
The amendments came from the NCA membership. The constitution does
not allow the chairman to change the constitution. My moral authority
must be judged from the perspective of the people on the ground,
the ordinary members, and the struggling majority of the people
of Zimbabwe. These are the people who know as a matter of fact that
they need a new constitution. They decide on any change in the organisation,
whether the organisation needs any changes in leadership and so
on. So as far as we are concerned you can't talk of a lack of moral
authority because the NCA membership wanted me to stay on. But if
you are looking at it from an outsider's point of view or from that
of someone who wanted to take over, then certainly you would think
that there is now a lack of morals.
Q:
Even if it was the NCA delegates who proposed and adopted the constitutional
amendments, why did you have to accept being re-elected when you
had served the maximum two two-year terms under the old order?
A:
I believe that my leadership at the moment will go a long way in
our fight. So when the request came to re-elect me, I was more than
happy to accept it. So it doesn't follow that the people who asked
me to stand again for re-election were talking to an unwilling person.
I have been around working with them and I know why they need me
to remain in this position. They believe I still have a role to
play as chairman of NCA. I share that belief and I am not trying
to second guess them. It is fact.
Q:
Can you tell us why you did not simply recuse yourself from contesting
for the chairman's post, not only so that new blood could take over
but also for the sake of setting an example to others both inside
and outside the NCA that leaders should be prepared to give up power
even if not legally bound to do so?
A:
We are not here to set examples on how long people should stay in
power. We are here to fight for a cause. We are agenda driven and
the best person to lead that agenda to fruition should be given
a chance as long as the membership agrees.
Q:
Do you really feel you still have the respect of the people to lead
the fight for a new constitution or let alone to pressure Mugabe
to accept limiting of terms in office?
A:
Well, I think you need to understand the role of the NCA. The role
of the NCA is not to get Mugabe out of power. It is to push for
a constitution that is democratic and a result of wide consultation.
We will continue pushing for that. We will not ask Mugabe to leave,
we will ask him, force him if we can to embrace constitutional reforms,
whether they affect his continued stay as President or not.
Q:
The fact of the matter is President Mugabe has no term limits and
has refused to yield to pressure for him to leave and you are following
exactly in the same footsteps or can you tell us why you think you
are different?
A:
I think there is a big difference between national constitutions
and constitutions of organisations fighting for a cause. First it
must not be assumed that we always have enough volunteers to take
up the risks involved. The people in the NCA are not in power. They
are trying to push for a certain cause. In that case we should be
willing to open up space for whoever is willing to push that cause,
instead of shutting them out. In that case you would make a mistake
if you would rigidly impose term limits on people who have the capacity
and the interest to lead that cause. But in a national constitution,
it would be a whole issue of governmental power. We will be talking
about people who control the army, the police and a lot of state
agencies. They need limits, lest they corrupt governmental systems.
But we have no such power in the NCA. Our only interest is in seeing
democracy flourish.
Q:
Given the controversy surrounding your re-election and the obvious
damage it is doing to the credibility of the NCA, are you still
convinced that what you did was the best thing or do you think you
could have handled things differently?
A:
I don't think there is anything I could have handled differently.
I would do it the same way because I don't see anything that was
done wrongly. The amendments, the elections, were all done in a
democratic and transparent manner.
Q:
What specific steps are you going to take to repair damaged relations
with other pro-democracy activists and organisations that at this
point are dismayed by what has happened in the NCA?
A:
I am actually not aware of who was for the amendments and who opposed
them. We just left the process to be determined by the Annual General
Meeting (AGM). There will be no bridge building or whatever because
our understanding is that democracy won. What will happen from now
onwards is to make the NCA even more formidable.
Q:
And what is your programme of action to achieve the NCA goal of
a new and democratic constitution for Zimbabwe?
A:
We are going to deepen our penetration of the grassroots, to educate
them about the new constitution to raise awareness so that they
can join our resistance programmes. We are going to increase the
activities, especially the resistance. This means more and more
demonstrations until the government gives in to our demands. The
support you saw at the AGM was a result of the good things we have
been doing.
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