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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
'Breaking
the political impasse in Zimbabwe'
Bulawayo
Agenda
July 04, 2008
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Introduction
The protracted conflict in Zimbabwe between the ruling elite and
the democratic forces has taken a heavy toll in terms of loss of
human life, economic meltdown and erosion of its democratic credentials.
Contrary to the pontification of the Mugabe administration presenting
itself as a victim of the Western conspiracies, the events of the
past few months have shown that the 'emperor has no clothes'
after all. In the bid to reclaim what was lost in the March 29 election,
the regime threw all caution to the wind and went on a killing spree.
Arguably, the current situation in Zimbabwe can only be described
as a 'complex political emergency'. It is an incontrovertible
fact that the Mugabe regime is struggling to survive against the
torrential wave of public anger. Its preferred method of survival
defies all trappings of democracy. The opposition pulled
out of the Presidential runoff citing a constellation of factors
inter alia the hydra of violence meted against its supporters, hostile
electoral environment and the uneven playing field. Contemporaneously,
a number of African countries finally seem to appreciate the problems
the country is facing. In fact, the 'one man election'
has been described as shameful and illegitimate. As the drama of
the presidential runoff result unfolds, it is critical for the African
leaders, with support from the wider international community, to
step in to stop the violence and resolve the deepening political
crisis. People's expectations and demands for change have
heightened and profound uncertainty about what form change would
take has raised the political stakes for all concerned. The gestation
period has taken longer than optimists had hoped. It is therefore,
the object of this discussion paper to inspire the debate on the
strategic options for the breaking of the mutually hurting electoral
logjam thereby ushering in a new constitutional, political and economic
dispensation.
Façade of democratic legitimacy
The contemporary world is increasingly becoming a democratic one,
where even tyrants are required to go through the exercise of multicandidate
and multiparty elections to preserve a semblance of domestic and
international legitimacy. The pull out by Morgan Tsvangirai, the
opposition candidate, from the runoff elections rested on popular
hopes of shattering the regime's facade of democratic legitimacy
thereby triggering a process that would eventually lead to genuine
elections. Thus, the opposition bravely and unambiguously expressed
its position which aimed at denying an iota of legitimacy to the
Mugabe administration and this has resonated very well with the
broad spectrum of the population in Zimbabwe. Predictably, the insistence
by Zanu PF to continue with the runoff election, and consequently
declare Mr Mugabe as a winner, has been met with widespread condemnation
from the region and internationally. The decision to continue with
the elections was a leap in the dark, an action that was as ruinous
to Zimbabwe's political gains as was the violence that had
embedded itself in the regime. It was a blow beneath the belt for
democracy. Subsequently, Mr Mugabe faces a hostile parliament, growing
public discontent, mounting international pressure and increased
isolation. The consequences of his staying in office would be catastrophic,
not least that the economic decline would intensify, with more Zimbabweans
fleeing across borders while inflation plummets to unprecedented
levels. Appropriate regional and international action must be taken
against the rogue regime. Examples of such actions would be declaring
his government illegitimate, tightening existing targeted sanctions
on known hardliners and establishing a Security Council Commission
to investigate reports of torture, murder and widespread violations
of human rights.
African
Union resolutions on Zimbabwe
The 11th African Union (AU) summit at the Egyptian Red Sea resort
on 1 July adopted a resolution
supporting the creation of a Government of National Unity (GNU)
for Zimbabwe through dialogue. The text also expressed support to
the SADC facilitation process on the issue while calling for continued
mediation efforts in order to assist the people and leadership of
Zimbabwe to resolve its problems. The resolution further appealed
to states and all parties concerned to refrain from any action that
may negatively impact on the climate of dialogue.
In the resolution, the AU expressed confidence that the people of
Zimbabwe will be able to resolve their differences and work together
once again as a nation, provided they received undivided support
from SADC, the AU and the world at large. As a result of the tense
situation in Zimbabwe, the African Union (AU) decided on a Government
of National Unity (GNU) as the ideal mechanism for conflict resolution
to the Zimbabwean crisis.
Instead of condemnations, the Union's leaders gently urged Mugabe
to engage in some sort of power-sharing agreement with Morgan Tsvangirai,
along the lines of a deal that ended violence in Kenya earlier this
year. While the AU is lauded for its efforts, though feeble, to
end the political impasse in Zimbabwe, its prescriptive approach
to the crisis will unfortunately lead to a further complication
of the crisis than transformation. The 'copy and paste'
solution will prove disastrous for Africa in general and for Zimbabwe
in particular.
The Kofi Anan GNU solution imposed on Kenya has set a dangerous
political precedence for despots and dictators on the continent.
Unpopular regimes such as the Kibaki and Mugabe administrations
have found means of survival through a GNU against the will of their
populations. The GNU that was pushed by Kofi Annan in Kenya stopped
the violence by pacifying the various political players through
rewarding them with political posts.
The Government of National Unity only served to silence the guns
but did not address the fundamental grievances of the masses. While
in the interim, the GNU approach may seem to be an easy panacea
to the crisis, in the mid and long terms the crisis will indeed
resurface. With regards to Zimbabwe, it should be noted that any
conflict resolution approach should be guided by the outcome of
the March 2008 harmonized election result which demonstrated the
will of the people of Zimbabwe. The struggle in Zimbabwe is not
of power but for democracy. The AU diagnosis of the Zimbabwe problem
is flawed and its prescription poisonous. This simply means that
a power-sharing deal as signified by the Kenyan model is not only
inappropriate but also retrogressive for Zimbabwe. The African leaders
should refrain from rewarding regimes which cling to power through
violence and undemocratic means. It is on record that Mugabe's
administration was fraudulently elected hence the solution to Zimbabwe
crisis should comprise measures that shall allow for the preparations
of a truly democratic process of constituting a government.
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