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100
Days: An agenda for government and donors in a new Zimbabwe
Adam Smith International
July 20, 2007
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Contents
Introduction
1. Restoring economic stability, protecting livelihoods and building
a platform for sustained growth
2. Removing existing and avoiding new causes of conflict
3. Ensuring government capacity to deliver the 100-Day Agenda
4. Providing security and protecting citizen rights
5. Improving access to basic services
6. Agreeing a roadmap to a new constitution
7. Freeing speech and access to information
8. Enabling government to communicate with citizens and win their
support
9. Encouraging the return of exiles from abroad
Forward
This report
sets out an ambitious 100 Day Agenda for a new Zimbabwean Government.
We do not know when that Government will take office, its form or
composition, but we do know that it will face a host of extremely
severe problems that have resulted from the policies pursued by
the government of Robert Mugabe. Speed is critical in addressing
the problems of a failing state like Zimbabwe.
It is much easier
to take firm and effective action at an early stage than to wait
until the situation is no longer advantageous. The lessons of Iraq
and Afghanistan are very clear on this point. Little was done to
reconstruct Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the Allied victory
so that, partially as a consequence, the security situation worsened
to such an extent that reconstruction is now next to impossible.
Similarly in Afghanistan, it took a very long time to deliver any
concrete benefits to the population, a significant factor in the
re-emergence of the Taliban.
Zimbabwe will
need a clear plan and the political will to implement it. From the
international community it will need high quality advice and assistance
as soon as possible. It will be vital to build up the momentum for
reform from the earliest days of the new government. Consequently
we have produced this report offering recommendations to the new
Zimbabwean Government as well as to the international community.
One part of
the report addresses the Government, the other addresses donors.
Together the paper provides the full context for the solutions we
suggest for rebuilding the country. Whilst considerable research
has gone into the background of Zimbabwe's situation we have limited
the amount of facts and figures in this paper to make our advice
as focused on solutions as possible. We have drawn upon our own
extensive experience of working in conflict-affected countries,
including Iraq, Afghanistan,Palestine, Sudan,Rwanda, Liberia, and
Sierra Leone.
Our work in
these countries has encompassed a very broad range of work including
policy formulation, public financial management, private sector
development, state enterprise reform, civil service reform, legal
and regulatory reform, human resource development, change management,
training and capacity building, anti-corruption and natural resource
management. Our experience suggests that overcoming the challenges
faced by Zimbabwe will take commitment, hard work, and time, but
with good advance planning, effective policies and prompt and well-managed
assistance Zimbabwe will be able to do better than other countries
that have recently faced the task of large-scale reform and reconstruction.We
therefore hope that this report is both a useful contribution to
debate and a practical guide to action.
Introduction
This paper sets
out advice and guidance for you, the incoming President of Zimbabwe,
on actions that your new government should take on coming to power.
Our recommended
actions are designed both to establish firm foundations for political,
economic and social regeneration of Zimbabwe and, critically, to
establish the legitimacy of your new government in the eyes both
of the Zimbabwean people and the international community.
Legitimacy is
critical to the success of a new government both at home and abroad.
Domestically, legitimacy reduces the risk of further political upheaval
and increases the likelihood that potentially difficult reform efforts
will be both successful and far-reaching. Internationally, legitimacy
is a necessary pre-requisite to getting the volumes of aid and emergency
assistance that will be required to kick start a sustainable government
led programme of regeneration.
The paper sets
out actions that should be taken or actively considered in the first
100 days of a new administration. The actions - taken together -
form a comprehensive, strategic reform programme that will establish
a reputation for competence and position your government as setting
its own agenda rather than having its agenda set for it by external
actors in general and the diplomatic and donor community in particular.
The importance of appearing to be actively in control of your own
government's programme, rather than passively receiving direction
from outside actors, is a key factor in establishing legitimacy.
To this end
the programme set out here aims to provide thinking for all areas
of government action and seeks to help:
- Restore macroeconomic
stability and resolve the severe monetary crisis which is an immediate
threat to the lives of citizens and the security of their livelihoods;
- Remove the causes of conflict between citizens and prevent new
conflicts being created as a consequence of the transition of political
power, through immediate actions and the establishment of longer-term
processes;
- Assess and understand all current government capacities, including
central government institutions, identify gaps with desired capacity,
and develop medium and long-term plans to fill those gaps;
- Improve government capacity to provide security to all citizens
without discrimination and to safeguard their rights under law through
an impartial judiciary;
- Increase access to basic health services, education and utilities,
through improved government effectiveness and coordination of alternative
delivery channels;
- Win acceptance from the major political parties and civil society
organizations by clearly communicating how a new constitution will
be developed, and how government will respond to their needs and
interests during the interim period before a new constitution is
agreed;
- Remove inappropriate restrictions on freedom of speech and access
to information, both for individual citizens and the media;
- Persuade citizens of the new government's commitment to the welfare
of all sections of society, of its break with previous governments
and of its greater legitimacy, by ensuring citizens are fully aware
of the government's decisions, plans and achievements in all the
above activities; and
- Work towards bringing back much-needed human capital lost over
recent years through the brain drain. Clear communication of a 100
day programme and implementation of the actions contained within
it would ensure the new government has the political space and capital
to drive progress forward and to maintain its popular mandate.
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