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Inclusive government - Index of articles
Life
is just not getting any better in Zimbabwe
IRIN
News
May
25, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=89248
The death of Zimbabwe's
secretary for agriculture, Renson Gasela, and two other senior officials
from the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in a car accident
recently has highlighted the country's inability to respond to accidents,
emergencies or disasters.
It took more than eight
hours for the men to receive assistance after the accident because
police in the nearby southeastern mining town of Zvishavane had
no transport, and fire brigade units had no fuel to make the 25km
journey. Emergency services only arrived after the MDC secretary
general, Welshman Ncube, provided fuel.
"That incident alone
is a small representation of how the coalition government has dismally
failed the people of Zimbabwe," political analyst John Makumbe
told IRIN, because the response time probably would have been quicker
if senior officials from ZANU-PF - the other party in Zimbabwe's
unity government - had been involved in an accident.
"The truth of the
matter is that the inclusive government is failing to deliver, or
to improve the lives of Zimbabweans. When schools opened recently,
a majority of students were turned away because their parents or
guardians could not afford to pay school fees; supermarket shelves
are full of goods and food, but a visit to many households will
reveal that people are starving in their homes."
The unity government,
a fragile coalition between President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF, Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC, and an MDC breakaway faction led
by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara - has failed to inspire
since its formation in February 2009.
Collapsing
services
National Railways of
Zimbabwe, the country's train service, is on the verge of collapse,
as is the Zimbabwe United Passenger Company, the public bus service;
domestic refuse has begun piling up in urban areas as municipalities
fail to collect it; Health and Child Welfare minister Henry Madzorera
revealed that 78 percent of midwife positions are vacant.
The intermittent supply
of electricity is expected to get worse because Zimbabwe will be
exporting 300 megawatts of electricity to South Africa during the
FIFA World Cup competition beginning in June.
Barbra Mawara, a junior
manager at a manufacturing company in the capital, Harare, told
IRIN that she had decided against leaving the country after the
formation of the unity government, but was once again toying with
the idea.
"Over the
last few months it has dawned on me that we are certainly going
nowhere in terms of the improvement of our lives, life has become
even more expensive. The present and the future are bleak; there
is fatigue and lack of will among Zimbabweans. The politicians have
certainly let Zimbabweans down while fighting over jobs among themselves,"
she said.
The exasperation over
any real progress is also affecting politicians. "The MDC has
been taken over by greedy people with self-serving interests. We
have started campaigning among the people in preparation for elections
[expected to take place in 2011 or 2012]," said Job Sikhala,
a former senior official in Mutambara's party who has broken away
to form the MDC 99 party. [The MDC was formed in 1999].
He said the coalition
government had made little progress in improving people's lives,
as Mugabe continued to control the national agenda. "In the
inclusive government Mugabe remains the driver of the bus, with
Tsvangirai as the bus conductor, while Mutambara is the baggage
loader, and that will not result in any meaningful changes."
The latest example
of Mugabe's apparent disregard for his coalition partners and the
Global Political Agreement,
which paved the way for the unity government, has been the appointment
of George Chiweshe to head the High Court.
Chiweshe was head of
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission in 2008, which the MDC claim saw
large-scale rigging to ensure that Tsvangirai did not win an outright
victory in the presidential poll and the election result was delayed
for month.
A band
aid
"The inclusive government
only managed to stop the bleeding but did not cure the wound. Some
stability was attained, but there has been no progress," political
commentator Luke Tamborinyoka told IRIN.
"There is no progress
on the land audit, the constitution-making process, and the opening
of media space; there is high unemployment and poverty, and although
supermarket shelves are full, few can afford the commodities,"
he said.
Human rights activist
and political commentator Rejoice Ngwenya told IRIN: "Politicians
argue that because of the inclusive government there is little political
violence and that supermarket shelves have goods, but that can hardly
be an acceptable excuse because violence and the poor economic environment
was brought by politicians."
Ngwenya commented:
"In any case, violence is on the increase while many people
can not afford to buy the food, which is expensive. Because of failure
to secure credit lines to improve the performance of the inclusive
government, the coalition has weakened over the months since its
formation."
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