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Hot
Seat with Rejoice Ngwenya and William Bango: Is MDC selling its
soul to make GNU work?
Violet Gonda, SW Radio Africa
March 19, 2010
http://www.swradioafrica.com/pages/hotseat230310.htm
Violet Gonda
presents her latest Hot Seat programme, where she speaks to William
Bango, former spokesperson for MDC President Morgan Tsvangirai,
and political analyst Rejoice Ngwenya. They analyse President Jacob
Zuma's recent trip to Zimbabwe . Was the South African President
successful in his mission to break the political deadlock? Is the
MDC selling its soul just to make this inclusive government work?
Find out why Ngwenya believes the MDC has accepted a 'junior
party mentality,' and is giving too much respect to Zanu-PF,
and why Bango believes the MDC has made 'tremendous'
in-roads which have reduced Zanu-PF to the status of an opposition
party.
Violet
Gonda: My guests on the Hot Seat programme
are William Bango, a former spokesperson for MDC President Morgan
Tsvangirai, and political analyst Rejoice Ngwenya, giving us their
analysis of President Zuma's recent trip to Zimbabwe to try
and break the political impasse. Let me start with Mr Bango, did
the South African President succeed in his mission to break the
deadlock that is threatening the fragile coalition government?
Willam
Bango: Well the result has to be seen,
what happens in the next few days is going to be very useful. It's
going to, in our view; put a number of minds to rest. We have spent
quite a long time in this country since the GPA
was signed. People are very anxious as to why the process has been
dragging on, we wonder and this is the view of many Zimbabweans,
as to why our leaders continue to negotiate over matters that are
enshrined in our constitution.
By the way, Amendment Number 19 of the Constitution incorporates
the GPA and the concern, the anxiety and the feeling and fears among
the people that we still try to bring in external mediators to look
at our Constitution and to discuss matters which should simply be
clear and straightforward and allow us to move on with our lives.
Gonda:
Right, let me go to Mr Ngwenya, what did we expect from the South
African President and in your view, were those expectations met?
Rejoice
Ngwenya: Well in principle the biggest error that we've
made, we have given Zuma too much credibility in his ability to
be an effective mediator. Now we are seeing a perpetuation of these
political games which were started by Thabo Mbeki, SADC is also
on to it. Zuma comes to Harare, he says a couple of nice things
and we are not seeing any deliverables, we keep being told that
there are certain deadlines and dates that have to be fulfilled,
agreements that have to be fulfilled.
We are being
told things that we already know and we are convinced that this
is a political game which only one person can benefit which is Robert
Mugabe. So the inability of Zuma and SADC to bring a conclusive
arrangement to this agreement is cruelly exposing their hypocrisy,
Zuma was on holiday and he's gone back to South Africa and
it's going to be business as usual and I'm sure that
we are going to be in a few days time, up until about the 31st of
this month, we are going to know that once again the people of this
country have been taken for a ride Violet.
Gonda: President
Zuma said that the rival political parties had agreed to a package
of measures that will be implemented as per the decision of the
SADC Troika in Maputo . Is there any understanding as to what these
measures are?
Ngwenya:
Well obviously at this stage it's not very clear. This is
what we have been saying, when you are a mediator and you have spent
two days on a negotiating table, what we expect is for him to be
able to lay these things clearly in black and white. E.g. 'We
agreed in this round of negotiations that Gono and Tomana are going
to be relieved of their duties, we've agreed that licences
are going to be issued, we've agreed that the issue of sanctions
we have no capacity to handle it'.
But these are
the deliverables that we are saying we should see and as far as
I am concerned we don't see anything that is visible that
we can call a deliverable. So what we know is just a press conference
and all the other innuendos and submissions that have been talked
about in the past have been regurgitated and it leaves us with a
sense of exasperation that perhaps the referee is not as impartial
as we thought.
Gonda:
What are your thoughts on this Mr Bango? Is there any understanding
as to what these leaders have really agreed to, what President Zuma
described as a package of measures? What are these?
Bango: I think
the MDC is stuck between a rock and a hard place. Here is a person
who is unwilling to negotiate, the implementation of a set of agreed
positions and the MDC is trying almost every day to see to it that
the GPA, the agreement itself, is allowed to sit down. The ordinary
person in Cheche, Tamandai, in Dotito and in other places, people
are wondering as to why we are delaying implementing what we agreed
on so that the nation can move on to other things. Our main problem
at the moment and that is the general sentiment countrywide is that
the people are saying why should we continue to talk about matters
that we thought had been dealt with a long time ago?
Why can't we move on as a nation? If one person, if one signature
to that agreement decides to continue breaking the law, to continue
disrespecting a clear constitutional provision, to continue disrespecting
a position the nation thought was going to take them from one point
to another, then perhaps people like Zuma and other mediators should
do is to come and find ways of nudging that person just to do what
normal habits of citizenship demand of them, that they get on with
their work.
So for ordinary
people, the continuing discussions over what should be done, what
should have been done, what should be planned for the future and
it's getting on to them. Zanu-PF and Robert Mugabe are behaving
as if they are in the pre-2008 era, they still have a nostalgic
view that Zanu- PF is still in power but the fact of the matter
remains that there's been a regime change in this country
since the signing of that agreement and to get that regime change
sit down, to get it recommended, to get it to be seen as the new
dispensation is the problem. And one party has decided that they
will continue to flout the law, they will continue to disregard
norms and standards and what is generally accepted as normal in
our own society and many people are baffled as to what these people
still continue to talk about.
Gonda:
As a person who used to be very close, in terms of you were the
spokesperson for the President of the MDC Morgan Tsvangirai, what
are your thoughts on what could be happening with the MDC? Why is
the MDC allowing this to happen?
Bango:
Well all transitions are normally very difficult processes. In the
case of Rhodesia , the whole transition began with the Geneva Conference
of 1976 and it ended in 1980 - 1979/1980. In South Africa
the transition began in earnest with the release of Mandela in February
1990 and it ended four/five years later. All what we are doing,
all what the MDC is trying to do is to try to cool down the temperatures
so that reason may prevail at the end of the day, so that people
can see that there is some benefit at the end of the day. People
have had a raw deal for a long time.
They want food
on their tables, they want progress over their own conditions, and
they want their lives improved. We have a typhoid epidemic coming
up now, yesterday we had cholera, we have a drought looming, we
have a food emergency in our hands yet we are talking about peripheral
issues.
We are talking
about trying to erode each other's political brand, Zanu-PF
is trying to blame, to erode Morgan Tsvangirai's brand by
delaying, wearing down the MDC , wearing down the people, using
money to confuse the electorate, trying to develop an apathetic
political situation in this country, trying to demobilise everybody,
trying to make people lose hope so that at least they could have
a flicker, a flicker burning indicating that perhaps Zanu-PF may
return to power as a sole Zanu-PF government, which I don't
think in the foreseeable future is a distinct possibility.
Gonda: But
Mr Bango, some MDC supporters on the ground are feeling betrayed
and are tired of what they describe as this talks charade. Now is
the MDC selling its soul just to make this inclusive government
work?
Ngwenya: Violet,
can I also come in there?
Gonda: Yes.
Bango: That's
exactly what Zanu-PF is trying to get at. Zanu-PF is trying to demobilise
the people. Zanu-PF is trying to use time, money and the people
to erode the MDC brand. The party generally is aware of these tricks,
the party generally understands this from grassroots structures
all over the country, but what is frustrating them is that they
want to see a result arrive.
There is a
general understanding that in any meaningful transition results
rarely arrive early, results always come late, but there must be
a clear path which they can demarcate, they can see that slowly
we are getting toward an intended destination.
Gonda: Let
me go to Mr Ngwenya and then I'll come back to you Mr Bango
on this. What are your thoughts on this because villagers we speak
to from rural areas such as in Mudzi and in Masvingo they say that
they are being beaten up and their livestock stolen and they are
saying there is no-one to talk to about this, including the MDC
. Now as I asked Mr Bango, what are your thoughts on this? Is the
MDC selling its soul just to make this inclusive government work
and is turning a blind eye to what is happening on the ground like
the violence that is continuing?
Ngwenya: The
point I would like to make . . . (interrupted)
Bango:
The MDC is not in government at the moment. The MDC is not the only
party that is in government. What we have is a marriage, a marriage
that is running a transitional arrangement, that is running the
country and in that transitional arrangement there is always a clash
of vision, there are always conflicting interests, there is always
going to be a case of shadow boxers raising their fists in all directions
and so forth.The
people generally do understand that but while they do understand
that unfortunate position they would want to see a definite move
towards a possibility of putting that behind them so that they can
get on with their lives.
Gonda:
Mr Ngwenya can you respond to my question and also to what Mr Bango
has just said that the MDC is not in government?
Ngwenya:
Well I don't know what he means when he says that the MDC
is not in government. The MDC is in government. The problem that
we can see here is of a political party that has a junior party
mentality. It is a political party that has given too much respect
to Robert Mugabe. It is a political party that has got an electoral
majority and they don't seem to be getting grips on the situation.
The villagers
have got a right to feel that they have been abandoned because the
party is not visible. We have not seen the MDC going into the commercial
farming areas questioning those war veterans and asking them what
they are doing in there. And we want to see MDC assuming a leadership
role they were bestowed by the majority of the voters. What is actually
clear is that perhaps since 2000, the party has failed to produce
alternative political strategies.
We want a Plan
B. If the MDC for instance, decided to leave government today, do
they have ability to mobilise the masses against the Zanu-PF machinery?
Obviously it means that what they are really lacking is that critical
ability to be able to galvanise masses, so they use the masses to
fulfil their political objectives. Now the MDC is in government
so we expect them to take charge.
They are giving
Mugabe too much credibility, Mugabe is junior partner and we feel
that really perhaps they don't appreciate the element of being
the majority party, so we want to see alternative strategies. If
this Agreement does not work by the end of this month, what alternative
does MDC have? I want Bango to be very clear on that. What alternative
does MDC offer to people of Zimbabwe if Zanu- PF continues to play
truant in the GPA?
Gonda:
Before Mr Bango responds Mr Ngwenya can you just tell us a bit more
about what you have just said because some allies of the MDC have
described them as hapless strategists. Now is this because their
strategy is poorly executed or is inadequately communicated?
Ngwenya: Well
basically when you are talking about a strategy execution it will
obviously would depend on the quality of the strategists (inaudible)
. . . For instance if you look at the way Mugabe stripped certain
political powers from MDC ministers, all they did was to protest
about it.
Really we want
to see more positive action, we want to see more action on the ground.
In terms of communicating to the grassroots, they should have a
fall-back strategy of going to the grassroots to say our powers
that were bestowed upon us by you the electorate have been stripped
from us, what do you think we should be doing?
We cannot have strategic decisions only being discussed at MDC level
we want to see the grassroots participating and being involved in
the execution of that particular strategy. So the assumption that
we have as analysts is perhaps MDC does not have Plan B, they don't
have a fall-back strategy. This is why Mugabe can afford to sit
there and behave like the senior partner and abuse them because
there's no alternative strategy.
So you could
be right by saying perhaps the weakness is in terms of the communication
of the strategy. We want to see the grassroots being involved. We
want to see Morgan Tsvangirai and his team, the Arthur Mutambaras
of the world getting into the front line of the action, going into
the farms, talking to the media to try and entice the media to fight
for their right of freedom of expression but we are not seeing that.
We are hearing
a lot of diplomatic talk about; 'Mugabe being a good coalition
partner, it's a workable Agreement', but we know that
the agreement is not workable. It is not right for MDC to make excuses
for Mugabe. It is not right. The responsibility of the MDC is to
expose Zanu-PF as truant partner in the agreement and therefore
we are then able to seek solutions that are backed by critical leverage
from the voting masses.
Gonda:
Now Mr Bango can you respond to this and also can you explain before
you do that - what you meant by 'the MDC is not in government'?
Bango:
Well what I meant was that the MDC is not the party that formed
this government alone, as a party on its own, even when it won the
election on March 29, 2008 , that's what I meant by that because
the MDC is not the government as a single party. But to answer the
issues that Mr Ngwenya has raised let me make it clear right from
the outset that I don't speak for the MDC anymore but what
I know is that whenever there is a fight between two protagonists,
to simply join in the brawl, to simply join in the melee and start
hitting back would confuse the situation even further, when the
national sentiment is pointing towards a direction in which a lasting
solution could be on the way forward.
To expect the
MDC to take off its gloves and say let's meet one on one in
the street and let's see who is the most stronger between
itself and Zanu-PF, using those kind of Stone Age tactics would
not move this nation any further.
The point that
I might need to add is that if you conduct an analysis of the people
who are spearheading the current chaos, the current mayhem in the
country you would actually see that after the GPA was signed, the
agreement was signed, Zanu-PF formed a parallel administration,
one that is composed of hardliners, you get these elements in the
police force, you get these elements in the military, you get these
elements in the judiciary, you get these elements in the media who
are running their own fields apart from the spirit of inclusivity
and their business is a nostalgic business which keeps on drawing
them back to the pre-2008 position which makes them feel and think
that Robert Mugabe is still thoroughly in charge of Zimbabwe which
is far from the truth.
These elements
unfortunately are still extremely powerful and they get the blessing
often from the top leadership of Zanu-PF itself because Zanu PF
itself is seeing that it has lost the plot, their supporters countrywide
are totally confused as to what actually is taking place in the
party. After ten years of incessant brain washing that Morgan Tsvangirai
would never set foot in a government office, they are seeing him
today, with the designation of Prime Minister and Zanu-PF is failing
to explain this simple fact.
They cannot
run the same propaganda mantra that we are now sitting with a vassal
of imperialism so the hardliners have taken centre stage in Zanu
PF, trying to reassure their confused electorate that the situation
has hardly changed, when the reality on the ground is totally different.
Regarding the
mobilisation efforts and the whole question of keeping the country
wired up from the MDC side, as an official of the MDC I can tell
you there's activity all over the country, almost every week.
The MDC structures are actually getting stronger by the day. In
the strongholds, the previous strongholds of Zanu-PF, the MDC is
making inroads every day, Zanu-PF structures have disappeared in
most parts of the country.
They are still
reliant on remnants from their militia, the remnants from the rogue
group of war veterans and some retired soldiers but by and large,
the national mood, the national spirit is that change is inevitable
and that the reality is that this inclusive government has brought
in a huge peace dividend to a previously battered community especially
the people in the rural areas who have been held hostage by Zanu-PF
for a decade and longer than that.
Gonda:
How do you respond to people who say that the MDC keeps changing
deadlines and has failed to put pressure on Robert Mugabe and that
Zanu-PF is just rolling over them? And some critics even go as far
as to say that the MDC is being swallowed up by Zanu-PF? What can
you say about that?
Bango:
The MDC has made tremendous inroads during the past year while in
this government. For the first time, the MDC managed to second its
officials to be appointed ambassadors in places where previously
it was unthinkable that Robert Mugabe and Zanu-PF could accept that.
The MDC has made inroads in Local Government, in a number of areas
the MDC has managed to contain the rot that was going on in government.
Even in their
day-to-day business in Cabinet and other places the presence of
the MDC has had a serious stabilising effect. The last year alone,
the last year alone was quite significant in this country and the
impact of the change that has taken place in this country can be
attributed to the presence of the MDC .
The MDC cannot
be expected to overhaul the entire system overnight because it is
not solely in government, it is unable to present its policy positions
and run away with it because they are currently in this negotiated
partnership where the situation unfortunately has to move fairly
slowly because the other party is in favour of a failed state status.
Gonda:
Let me go to a different issue and this is going back to what President
Zuma said when he said that the political parties had agreed to
a 'package of measures' that will be implemented as
per the decision of the SADC Troika in Maputo. Now we all know that
in November last year the parties agreed at this Summit to urge
the international community to lift all forms of sanctions on Zimbabwe
and also to engage in dialogue about all the outstanding issues
in the GPA.
Now we know
that Europe and the USA have said to the parties in Zimbabwe that
they should implement what they agreed to and then they will consider
the issue of removing the targeted sanctions. Now given what Zuma
has been told regarding the restrictive measures during his recent
trip to the UK , what will be his next step on this? Let me start
with Mr Ngwenya.
Ngwenya:
Well really the principle is that if the EU and the Americans and
the West have already mentioned that they are not going to lift
sanctions until the partners have fulfilled their obligations of
the Agreement, that's a dead end. In other words, there is
no way this Agreement can proceed if the negotiating partners commit
themselves to think that they cannot fulfil - so the issue
around Mr Zuma is that then he has to focus on things that are deliverable.
There are basic things within the agreement that are within the
control of the negotiating parties - freeing the media, ensuring
that there is no political intimidation and so on and so forth.
And those are the things that the EU is saying - when you
guys agreed, these are the things that you agreed to deliver. Now
when you talk about sanctions, you then look at the scenario around
the continued abuse of human rights in Zimbabwe which are the causative
factors.
In other words, the factors that caused the implementation of the
sanctions regime are still intact, so it does not make sense for
Zuma to make that part of the negotiating deliverable.
So as far as
the sanctions are concerned, I'm sure Zuma has to accept and
admit as a negotiating partner that he has reached a dead end, then
refocus the negotiating partners around issues that are deliverable.
My opinion really is perhaps that if Zuma then gets stuck in the
mud around the issue of sanctions he is basically playing the same
game that Zanu-PF is playing, that any fulfilment of the Agreement
is dependent upon the sanctions which I think really is asking for
too much.
It's
more in fact, of insulting our intelligence because we know that
the MDC , they can cry all they want but as long as the scenario
around which sanctions were imposed on the Zanu-PF activists remain
intact, they are not going to be lifted so perhaps it is the right
time to look at other issues that are deliverable.
Gonda:
Mr Bango has Zuma reached a dead end on the issue of sanctions or
do you think he's telling Robert Mugabe up front to reach
a compromise if he wants the targeted sanctions to be removed?
Bango:
I think President Zuma is simply being diplomatic. The issue of
restrictive measures, the issue of sanctions, political sanctions
against rogue States date back to more than 20 years ago. You will
recall at the Commonwealth Summit in Harare in 1991, the Harare
Declaration came out very clearly on the question of the observance
of human rights and how rogue States should be treated by the international
community.
That position,
the Harare Declaration was reaffirmed at the Millbrook Plan of Action
in Australia two years later and the result of that was the action
that was taken on Fiji in 1995 when there was a military coup there
and similar restrictions were imposed on the civilian/military junta
which had taken over power there.
A few years
later we saw similar actions being taken on Pakistan and after Pakistan
, then Zimbabwe ironically where this declaration emanated from
at the beginning, they became a victim of that simply because it
was falling back on what it had managed to steer through with colleagues
in the Commonwealth of Nations.
The issue of
institutional violence is no longer a debatable matter as far as
Zimbabwe is concerned. There are lots of cases, documented cases,
cases which have never been denied, showing and pointing to the
fact that the State itself has been instrumental in violence and
the State that has been there was led by certain individuals and
certain measures have to be taken in terms of these universal benchmarks,
universal forms of sanctions on anybody whose behaviour becomes
misplaced.
So to keep
on talking about whether sanctions should be removed on 200 individuals
and less than a dozen companies which are known to have been helping
a rogue state to institutionalise violence is to engage in a sterile
and moribund debate. President Zuma is simply being diplomatic,
trying to cover needs from both sides.
People know what has gone wrong with this country; people know that
you can literally do business with anybody in the world today without
any restriction whatsoever.
Phillip Chiyangwa
was on television the other day and he was boasting that he can
import any car from anywhere in the world, he can enjoy caviar from
any capital in the world, he can import his suits, his business
suits from anywhere in the world. And Phillip Chiyangwa is no small
beer, he is one of the topmost Zanu- PF officials and to keep on
running that mantra shows one very clear thing - Zanu-PF has
run out of an election message. Zanu-PF no longer knows what to
tell its supporters.
They cannot
tell people that they don't have the capacity or interest
to move away from their feudal way of doing things, to move away
from their aristocratic behaviour where they turn their top officials
into massive landowners and not farmers.
They do not
have any message to the electorate so they are harping on the sanctions
issue and of late, they are also talking about the need for empowerment.
I chuckled with friends yesterday when we read Gono's interview
in one of the local newspapers here and Gono was saying 'this
whole business about empowerment is misplaced!' Zanu-PF is
now out of its wits; they failed to empower people with their wholesale
agrarian reform programme, what makes them think they can empower
anybody by taking Lewisham Family Butchers or Donors Drycleaners
and think they can run away with it?
So, in fact,
these are political statements by a party that is desperate for
a political message that probably would resonate with the electorate.
Tied to that if you listen to recent Zanu-PF statements, Zanu-PF
is speaking as if it is in the opposition and is not part of the
GPA.
It is telling
the world and Zimbabweans that look at what your government is doing,
it's refusing to empower you, 'civil servants -
look at what your government is doing, it's not paying you'.
'Ordinary people, look at what your government is doing -
it's imposing sanctions'. They are speaking as if they
are outside government. They are speaking as if they are in the
opposition.
Further to
that, if you look at their principles, their position, and their
constitutional position they're putting forward, they are
saying - 'now we want two terms for a President'.
What happened to their saying that ZANU PF would rule forever? Why
are they are talking of two terms now when their oft stated position
for three decades was that they would rule until donkeys have horns?
It means here is a political party that is speaking as if they are
in opposition to a particular government.
Gonda:
OK. I am running out of time so I'll end with getting a final
word from Mr Ngwenya.
Ngwenya:
Well my final word really is that I think what we need from MDC
Violet is an alternative strategy Plan B. It must be clear now that
once the deadline has expired, Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara
should take a decisive decision either to stay in there and take
charge of the destiny of the people of this nation or they should
step out of this coalition government and find another approach
to liberating the people of this country. Thank you very much.
Bango:
Thank you.
Feedback
can be sent to violet@swradioafrica.com
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