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to the past for a peaceful future
IRIN News
Jul 01, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79037
An echo of Zimbabwe's
past is increasingly being viewed as the only peaceful solution
left to save the country from itself.
South African President
Thabo Mbeki, who has been the southern African region's appointed
Zimbabwe mediator for a year, is now calling for a transitional
government.
South Africa's foreign
affairs spokesperson, Ronnie Mamoepa, said in a statement on 30
June that "[President Robert Mugabe's] ZANU-PF and the [opposition]
MDC [Movement for Democratic Change] must enter into negotiations
which will lead to the formation of a transitional government that
extricates Zimbabwe from its current political challenges."
A transitional government,
also called a transitional authority, was often confused with a
government of national unity (GNU), but was a completely different
political animal, said Cheryl Hendricks, a senior research fellow
at the Institute for Security Studies, a political think-tank based
in Pretoria, South Africa.
"Transitional governments,
reached through a negotiated settlement, are usually tasked with
drafting a widely acceptable constitution and to create the environment
and instruments for a free and fair election that will determine
representation in a future government," Hendricks told IRIN.
Zimbabwe is dominating
the African Union summit at the Egyptian coastal resort of Sharm
el-Sheikh, after Mugabe claimed victory in the second round of voting
for a president in a violent election process roundly condemned
as flawed, even among the few African election observers permitted
to monitor it.
The specific use of the
term "transitional government" by South Africa, rather
than a GNU, which has also been mooted recently, is an indication
of Zimbabwe's despair, both political and economic.
"This is one of
the most astounding economic disasters in a peacetime economy in
history," Jeffrey Sachs, an independent economist and special
advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, said on
the sidelines of the AU summit.
Caretaker
government
Hendricks
said there were three main differences between a transitional authority
and a GNU: firstly, a "transitional government is a caretaker
government", established in the absence of a legitimate government,
and could be comprised of appointed officials, politicians and civil
society members, Hendricks said.
The second defining characteristic
was that a transitional authority enjoyed a limited mandate to create
a new constitution, and provided the necessary space to hold elections
for a GNU, which governed under an accepted constitution.
Lastly, the
time-frame of a transitional government was "short, versus
indefinite" in the case of a GNU. "In Zimbabwe the constitution
is contested - there appears to be little consensus on the norms,
values, priorities and practices that should guide the country,"
she said.
"There are high
levels of abuse of state power, widespread violence, and the economy
is in tatters. We primarily have two polarised parties, each asserting
their legitimate right to rule, without the prospect of settling
the dispute amicably through elections in the near future. The prospects
of unity, given these conditions, are highly unlikely, and a cobbled-together
GNU will be unstable," Hendricks commented.
The concept of a transitional
government is not alien to Zimbabwe as it could be argued that the
the country was born under such circumstances after the Lancaster
House negotiations in the UK.
In 1965, Ian Smith's administration made a Unilateral Declaration
of Independence and following agreements reached in London in 1979,
Britain reasserted its colonial control with Lord Soames installed
as Britain's last colonial Governor for four months to preside over
the country's first democratic elections, which Mugabe won.
UN transitional authorities
have been deployed in such fraught countries as East Timor and Cambodia,
although many military leaders have come to power on the premise
of a transitional authority intent on restoring democracy, only
to rule indefinitely.
Such pitfalls as the
military taking advantage of a political vacuum meant that the formation
of a transitional government required "very clear time-frames"
and specifics regarding its make-up, Hendricks said. Reaching an
agreement on setting up a transitional government required that
"acceptable mediators need to be brought into the process."
South Africa could remain
the SADC's mediator, but "to defuse accusations of bias [a
frequent claim by the MDC], the number of mediators can be expanded"
by bringing in representatives from the AU and the UN, as well as
civil society, she said.
For such a solution to
work, Hendricks said, a level of political maturity was required.
"The transitional government is not about scoring political
points or a contestation for power, but a mechanism to facilitate
the ushering in of a legitimate government."
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