| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Brinkmanship
over constitutional talks
IRIN News
November 26, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75516
Zimbabwe's main opposition,
the MDC, is threatening to pull out of talks with the ruling Zanu
PF party over its refusal to give way on key demands for political
reform. Leading members of the main faction of a divided MDC are
meeting this week in South Africa to discuss a possible boycott
of elections next March if laws limiting freedom of assembly and
the independent media remain on the statute books, MDC treasurer
Roy Bennett told IRIN. The MDC had agreed to talks at the urging
of SADC, mediated by South African President Thabo Mbeki, on the
understanding that both sides would make concessions, Bennett said.
But while the
MDC had ignored the protests of its supporters and in September
backed a Constitutional
Amendment No. 18 Bill, allowing Zimbabwe's President Robert
Mugabe to virtually handpick his successor, there was no reciprocation
on the MDC's demands for a halt to political violence and the repeal
of legislation widely seen an undemocratic. "We have to be
able to convince the people of Zimbabwe that there is merit for
them to participate [in the 2008 elections]," said Bennett.
"Because of the lack of a level playing field and continued
violence on the ground, in the current climate it will be difficult
to convince them to vote, and that their vote will count for something."
Bennett said South African President Thabo Mbeki's visit to Zimbabwe
last week to discuss progress in the talks with all sides was "posturing"
ahead of the European Union-Africa summit in Lisbon, Portugal, in
December.
However, political
analyst and director of the Mass
Public Opinion Institute, Eldred Masunungure, described as "brinkmanship"
any threatened boycott of the 2008 election, as both sides had too
much to lose if the talks failed. "[The MDC] entered the dialogue
process knowing the decks were stacked against them but, in my view,
if they withdraw [from the talks] they will be the bigger losers;
they will not be able to garner any sympathy from SADC or the AU."
Zanu PF "also desperately needs some kind of agreement that
could result in the lifting of what it terms 'Western sanctions';
Zanu PF is as desperate as perhaps the MDC to get something out
of the negotiating process," Masunungure commented. Although
the ruling party could countenance some concessions, such as those
contained in a newly gazetted electoral reform bill that liberalises
media coverage during the campaign period, "it will not concede
anything that erodes the pillars of its power".
The Zimbabwe
Electoral Support Network (ZESN), a rights group, said it was
still studying a proposed
electoral reform bill, introduced earlier this month without
any input from the MDC. But amendments to the current law, which
limit independent political oversight of the voting process, were
only part of the solution. "It's not a complete package until
laws that affect the political environment, allow fair campaigning
and a free media are addressed," ZESN national director Rindai
Chipfunde-Vava told IRIN. Zimbabwe's economy stumbled in the late
1990s, but slipped into crisis in 2000 with the emergence of the
MDC as the first significant challenge to Zanu PF's hold on power.
A violent election campaign and a chaotic land reform programme
divided the country, slashed foreign earnings, and froze foreign
investment, while the government accused the West of pursuing a
regime-change agenda.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|