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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
CSO position on ongoing talks
Zimbabwe
Civil Society
August 13, 2008
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Background
and Introduction
This is a compendium of positions taken by civil society organisations
in Zimbabwe on the talks between ZANU PF and the two formations
of the MDC, under the auspices of SADC, supported and endorsed by
the African Union and facilitated by South African president Thabo
Mbeki.
A Memorandum
of understanding (MOU) was signed on 21 July 2008, to begin
substantive talks between the main political parties which have
representation in parliament. The talks are a response to a deepening
political, economic and humanitarian crisis worsened by a disputed
election run off between Robert Mugabe of ZANU PF and Morgan Tsvangirai
of the MDC, who withdrew citing election irregularities. The election
was dismissed by SADC and AU observer missions as not representing
the will of the people of Zimbabwe and not providing ZANU PF the
legitimacy they were looking for.
The MOU acknowledges
"the recent challenges and the multiple threats to the well-being
of our people" and the signing was a commitment by the political
parties to work together to find a lasting solution to the country's
crisis through dialogue. The MOU also had interim easures which
include the issuing of statements condemning violence, taking "all
measures necessary to ensure that the structures and institutions
it controls are not engaged in the perpetration of violence"
and "eliminate all forms of political violence, including
by non-state actors" as well as ensuring the safe return of
internally displaced persons and enabling humanitarian and social
welfare organisations to render assistance.
Despite this
MOU and ongoing talks between the MDC's and ZANU PF, violence
against the opposition has continued and humanitarian access has
still not been given to organisations working in the field, particularly
the governmental ban on NGO's has not been lifted begging
the question of real commitment to these talks. Various organisations
such as the Solidarity
Peace Trust have produced very specific and well researched
reports on the violence clearly showing the extreme level of violence
which amount to the worst state-led violence that Zimbabweans have
experienced since the Gukurahundi massacres of the mid 1980's.
While the negotiation
process has not given any formal space for Civil Society positions
to be taken up, these are of crucial importance both because they
are views of specialists in various areas of expertise and because,
for any outcome of the negotiations to be sustainable, it needs
to have ownership by the people of Zimbabwe. Experts from Civil
Society will be involved in reconstruction scenarios as experts
and implementers. It is also important to note that some of the
organisations are broad based, grass roots organisation with wide
membership, presenting consulted views from their membership. Issues
raised by Civil Society are therefore important because they highlight
processes and ownership issues as well as areas of attention for
any reconstruction strategy.
Any government emerging from these talks will need technical and
financial support from the international community. The views presented
here therefore form an outline of some of the most urgent areas
of attention to be considered by the international community if
and when re-engaging Zimbabwe. Particularly any reengagement between
the broader international community and Zimbabwe needs to consider
and address the benchmarks for reengagement set up by Civil Society
organisations and presented here. Monitoring and evaluation mechanism
have to be put in place to guarantee the security and well being
of the Zimbabwean people, ensure human rights are respected, and
democratic principles are observed. Civil society will play a vital
monitoring role in this process.
In the event of Mugabe
and his party once again block the mediation process in the current
round of negotiations, concerted and strong actions to increase
pressure and isolate the ZANU PF regime must be taken by SADC, the
UN and Civic groups in the region and internationally.
The compendium begins
with a summary of the main issues and the benchmarks for possible
engagement put forward by 14 Civil Society Organisations. The last
section has recommendations to the political parties, the facilitator
and the international community.
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