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SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Too
many cooks could spoil mediation process
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Norman Chitapi in Harare (AR No. 115, 6-June-07)
June 06, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=336108&apc_state=henh
The Zimbabwe mediation
process being steered by the Southern African Development Community
is fraught with dangers, analysts warn. Not only are the differences
between President Robert Mugabe and his opponents close to irreconcilable,
but there is a real possibility that the process could be derailed
because there are simply too many voices trying to be heard.
Following the arrest
and beating of opposition leaders and supporters on March 11 for
trying to attend a banned rally, leaders of the Southern African
Development Community, SADC, convened an emergency meeting in Tanzania
at which they are reported to have expressed concern to Mugabe about
rising state-sponsored violence. The SADC then nominated South African
president Thabo Mbeki to take the lead in negotiating a solution
to the political confrontation.
Analysts say that whether
Mbeki tries to bring all interest groups into the negotiations or
confines himself to talking to Mugabe's ZANU-PF and the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, he will encounter difficulties.
"Mbeki might choose
to narrow the discussion to accommodate the two main political parties,"
said an analyst in the capital Harare. "This was the initial
projection. What this means is that if the two parties agree on
the minimum conditions for free and fair elections, these could
be held as scheduled in March next year," he said.
The presidential election
originally due in 2010 is likely to be brought forward to coincide
with next year's parliamentary ballot.
The two MDC factions
have used several meetings with Mbeki to make their position clear.
Their demands include an end to violence, access to publicly-owned
media for the opposition, the right to hold political rallies, a
new constitution, changes to electoral laws, and free and fair elections
under international supervision.
Mbeki has reportedly
written to Mugabe, although details of their communication have
not been made public.
The analyst warned that
confining the negotiations to the main political parties would not
satisfy all the interest groups lobbying for change in Zimbabwe.
He said such a process was likely to create resentment as it would
be seen as facilitating political change at the top without addressing
fundamental issues that would benefit wider society.
"There are many
people who would challenge the legitimacy of a process they saw
as hurried for political expediency, rather than a comprehensive
process leading to complete political, economic and social transformation,"
he said.
The other option is a
fully-fledged process in which Mbeki invites submissions from all
interested parties. In principle, this approach would be "ideal",
the analyst said, but the danger would be that it would take a lot
longer - possibly beyond the point when Mbeki could oversee
it.
"This approach
is ideal but has two ramifications," the analyst said. "First,
it means that Zimbabweans would have to defer next year's
elections indefinitely while they debate and discuss the transformation
they require. But given that Mbeki's term [as South African
president] ends in 2009, he [could be] the wrong man for the task
at hand and could . . . leave the process half-done. There is a
serious dilemma here."
A foreign diplomat in
Harare said Zimbabweans themselves must decide which route best
serves their interests, although prolonging the process could only
make recovery that much harder.
"While Mbeki will
need to be tough about what obstacles are placed in his way and
keep his eye constantly on the watch, Zimbabweans must decide what
they want," said the diplomat, who did not want to be named.
Mbeki is expected to
submit a preliminary report to the SADC on the progress he has made
before the end of June. "He will have to report progress or
failure. It depends on what Zimbabweans want. This is probably the
best opportunity for the country to resolve its dire crisis,"
said the diplomat.
But as well as the MDC,
opposition-aligned pressure groups are also pressing for their voices
to be heard - and their demands are for a different kind of
process.
Lovemore Madhuku, chairman
of the National Constitutional Assembly, a lobby group that has
been calling for a new constitution for years, said recently that
civil society groups must be involved in the dialogue. He said politicians
were obsessed with political power and not with fundamental transformation,
and could not be trusted to negotiate fairly.
His comments suggest
that non-government groups which hitherto appeared to speak with
one voice with the MDC are now pursuing a different agenda.
In other remarks - this
time speaking on behalf of the Save Zimbabwe Campaign, SZC, a coalition
of some 30 disparate groups ranging from students and labour groups
to churches and political parties - Madhuku said the SZC grouping
had drawn up a position paper which its members wanted Mbeki to
consider before any serious dialogue went ahead.
Another umbrella group,
the National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, also
said it was consulting stakeholders so that it could come up with
its own position paper to submit to Mbeki. It said there were many
important issues to be discussed - such as corruption, HIV/AIDS
and unemployment - that had a directly impact on the lives
of ordinary voters, but did not affect politicians.
There is a risk that
too many competing agendas could be to the Mugabe administration's
advantage.
"Let's hope
all the people now wanting to get involved in the dialogue know
what they are doing," commented a journalist working for an
independent newspaper. "Only recently, people were complaining
that Mugabe was afraid to face the electorate. But their demands
might just work in ZANU-PF's favour if they agree to postpone
the election. Whether Mugabe is sincere or not about negotiations,
he would welcome [a delay] so long as he is not personally accused
of stalling the process," he said.
Mugabe has said he is
not interested in a new constitution, since he blames the opposition
for the public's rejection of a revised document that he put
to voters in a February 2000 referendum.
The journalist said an
all-inclusive process like the Convention for a Democratic South
Africa, Codesa, which led to the first post-apartheid elections
in South Africa in 1994, could not be achieved in the period remaining
until March 2008. But he warned that taking too many shortcuts would
only store up bigger problems for the future.
Norman Chitapi is the
pseudonym of a journalist in Zimbabwe.
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