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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Inclusive government - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Political and security challenges to the transition
International
Crisis Group (ICG)
March 03, 2010
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Overview
As Zimbabwe
enters its second year under a unity government, the challenges
to democratic transformation have come into sharp focus. Despite
reasonable progress in restoring political and social stability,
ending widespread repression and stabilising the economy since February
2009, major threats could still derail the reform process. In particular,
resistance of intransigent and still powerful security sector leaders
and fractious in-fighting between and within the Zimbabwe African
National Union (ZANU-PF) and the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) must be addressed now. South Africa and other countries in
southern Africa - who monitor the accord that guides the transition
- must press the parties, and particularly President Robert
Mugabe, to see the transition through to a successful conclusion.
Donors should back their efforts.
The unity government,
created under the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) signed by Mugabe and MDC factional
leaders Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara, was born under a
cloud of scepticism. Most observers gave it little chance, predicting
that, even as prime minister, Tsvangirai would fall prey to Mugabe's
"divide, rule, co-opt and destroy" strategy. Against
the odds, the government started well: schools and hospitals re-opened;
civil servants were paid and returned to work; the Zimbabwe dollar
was shelved; goods returned to store shelves; and a cholera epidemic
was controlled. Human rights activists reported a significant drop
in abuses. Donors generally received well an ambitious yet pragmatic
reconstruction program calling for $8.5 billion in foreign aid and
investment.
But major concerns
undermining the transition process have come to the fore. Hardline
generals and other Mugabe loyalists in ZANU-PF are refusing to implement
the government's decisions, boycotting the new national security
organ and showing public disdain for Tsvangirai. Farm seizures have
continued virtually unabated. Most attention has focused on completing
the GPA, but ZANU-PF has delayed or ignored important commitments
in that document, while stalling constitutional reforms by insisting
on preserving broad executive privileges. Key blocked steps include
a land audit, appointment of MDC governors, an end of arbitrary
detentions and arrests, regular functioning of the National Security
Council in place of the infamous Joint Operations Command, public
consultations on a new constitution and preparation for elections.
These delays
reflect the two deeper challenges on which this briefing concentrates.
First, a mature political system must develop, so that ZANU-PF and
MDC engage as both competitors in the political arena and partners
in the inclusive government. This will be difficult, especially
under the divisive Mugabe, but other ZANU-PF leaders, including
the factions led by Vice President Joice Mujuru, and Defence Minister
Emmerson Mnangagwa, know that their party has lost much popular
support and needs a generational shift. For its part, the MDC must
keep faith and engaged with its broad following in the transition
process, including trade unions, human rights groups and women's
organisations. It must also show the country as a whole that it
is a viable custodian of the state - competent, transparent,
and capable of preserving social change since independence.
Equally challenging
are security issues. A relatively small number of "securocrats"
use their positions and symbiotic relationship with Mugabe to exercise
veto power over the transition. They are motivated by differing
factors: fear of losing power and its financial benefits, fear of
prosecution for political or financial abuses, and a belief that
they guard the liberation heritage against Tsvangirai and the MDC,
which they view as fronts for white and Western interests. Zimbabweans
across the political spectrum are quietly considering how to ease
these officers into retirement, even at the cost of allowing them
to keep their assets and providing them a degree of impunity from
domestic prosecution, while simultaneously professionalising security
forces respectful of human rights and a democratically elected government.
While the primary
tasks ahead rest with Zimbabweans, the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) must take seriously its GPA guarantor role. South
African President Jacob Zuma's activism as mediator must convey
the message that the region will abide no alternative to the GPA.
His recent actions, including appointment of three respected advisers
to oversee the Zimbabwe account, are welcome indications he will
be tougher vis-à-vis Mugabe on GPA obligations and respect
for rule of law.
The broader
international community, especially the UK, U.S., EU and China,
should support and complement SADC's efforts through careful
calibration of trade, aid, and investment to encourage progress;
maintenance of targeted sanctions on those thwarting the transition;
and lifting of sanctions on entities key to economic recovery. Donors
should provide new recovery and development assistance - including
for rural development, health and education and strengthening of
the judiciary, legislature and civil society - through transparent
mechanisms, such as the Multi-Donor Trust Fund.
This briefing
focuses on political party and security issues, as well as South
Africa's mediation. Subsequent reporting will analyse other
topics vital to the transition, including constitutional and legal
reform, justice and reconciliation, sanctions policies and security
sector reform.
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