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Zimbabwe's
Continuing Self-Destruction
International
Crisis Group (ICG)
June 06, 2006
http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=4162&l=1
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Overview
With scheduled presidential elections less than eighteen months
away, Zimbabwe faces the prospect of greater insecurity and violence.
The economy’s free fall has deepened public anger, and the ruling
Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) party
wants to avoid a popular vote by using the legislature it controls
to establish a "transitional presidency" and appoint a
successor to Robert Mugabe, who has said he will retire. By engineering
a transition, Mugabe also intends to secure a dignified personal
exit that includes a retirement package and security guarantees.
However, such plans may come unglued due to wrangling within ZANU-PF.
Through all this the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
has been weakened by a major leadership split.
Low voter turnout
in November 2005 deprived the newly created senate of any legitimacy,
but the exercise further tightened ZANU-PF’s grip on political power
and patronage. Creation of the senate gave an initial head start
to the ZANU-PF faction aligned to Vice President Joyce Mujuru in
the presidential succession race, although the fortunes of the competing
ZANU-PF faction led by the Minister of Rural Housing and Social
Amenities, Emmerson Mnangagwa, have recently improved.
ZANU-PF’s policies,
corruption and repressive governance are directly responsible for
the severe economic slide, growing public discontent and international
isolation. In April 2006, inflation officially topped 1,000 per
cent, helped by the decision to print $230 million worth of Zimbabwean
currency to pay international debts and sustain operations. Unemployment
is over 85 per cent, poverty over 90 per cent, and foreign reserves
are almost depleted. Over four million persons are in desperate
need of food. HIV/AIDS and malnutrition kill thousands every month.
Agriculture, the major source of foreign currency earnings, has
been particularly hard hit. There are severe shortages of basic
consumer items, and the prices of fuel and food are beyond the reach
of many. The 2005 "Operation
Murambatsvina" to clear urban slums forcibly deprived more
than 18 per cent of the population of homes or livelihoods and badly
damaged the informal sector, the lifeline for many urban poor.
Fearing street
protests to mark Murambatsvina’s anniversary in May, the government
has moved increasingly close to martial law. It has banned rallies,
marches and prayer meetings during the period surrounding the anniversary
and put security forces on high alert. Growing numbers of students,
religious activists and members of other civil society groups have
been detained.
The rising influence
of the military leadership in the succession struggle is troubling.
Zimbabwe’s armed forces have always been a pillar of the ruling
party’s power but recent months have seen increasing military involvement
in the party machinery and policy formulation. The crumbling economy
has meant a loss of government revenues, and the military rank and
file are being paid less and at irregular intervals, leading them
into criminality, allegedly including cross-border armed robbery.
Government difficulties in paying the troops raise a question of
whether the security forces can still be relied on to put down protests.
The current
division within the main opposition party MDC began over differences
in strategy regarding the November 2005 senate elections. While
both factions agree on constitutional reform, elections in 2008
and a blueprint for economic recovery, they are divided over participating
in government and elections while ZANU-PF can dictate events in
the legislative and tilt the electoral field. Unless the opposition
can put aside its feuds and coalesce around a unified position,
it will be difficult to maximise domestic pressure on ZANU-PF to
change its approach. The faction led by party president Morgan Tsvangirai
– which commands a larger following than that led by Welshman Ncube
and newcomer Arthur Mutambara – has unveiled a program of "democratic
resistance" and intends to pursue a non-violent campaign to
compel the government to agree to a democratic constitution and
hold parliamentary and presidential elections in March 2008. It
is backed by important parts of civil society including the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA) and the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU). Early rallies have attracted
large crowds, reasserting the greater relative strength of the Tsvangirai
group in comparison to its MDC rival.
The fissures
within both ZANU-PF and the MDC are unfortunate in light of the
fact that confidential 2004 talks, facilitated by South Africa and
recently made public by President Thabo Mbeki, nearly produced a
deal on a new constitution that could still serve as a starting
point for a transitional roadmap. South Africa has tried to use
financial leverage, in the form of a credit line, to press for new
inter-party constitutional talks, repeal of repressive laws and
an economic recovery plan. Mugabe sidestepped the initiative by
printing enough currency to repay debts to the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in February 2006.
The July 2006
summit of African heads of state and government offers an opportunity
to mobilise continental leaders behind a call for urgent action
to protect human rights in Zimbabwe and regional stability. While
tactical engagement by non-African governments with those very few
more reform-oriented figures within ZANU-PF may have merit, there
should be no relaxation of travel bans or financial sanctions in
place against key members of the regime or any developmental assistance
until there is real change on the ground. Unfortunately, the best
the international community may be able to do at this stage is maintain
pressure and plan carefully how to support a transition when opportunities
finally arise for reengagement. Tentative steps by the UN Secretary-General
to become more involved in facilitating such a transition are welcome
but seem unlikely to gain traction.
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