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Zimbabwe Compared: 'Progress' in the Rest of Africa - 'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference
Amanda Atwood, Kubatana.net
November 08, 2010

'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference index page

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Roundtable Participants: Jocelyn Alexander, Bill Freund, John Saul, Roger Southall, Luise White, Claude Kabemba

Presenting Blessing-Miles Tendi's work on powersharing in Zimbabwe as compared with Kenya, Jocelyn Alexander stated that the differences are greater than the similarities. Because of the difference in the nature of the political parties in the two countries, it made the political divide far harsher. In Zimbabwe, it is difficult to leave a political party, whereas in Kenya party membership has historically been more fluid.

However, Tendi argues, the outcome is equally bad in both countries terms of the power sharing agreement. Kenya and Zimbabwe, Alexander said Tendi argues, settled on similarly flawed power sharing models after foreign diplomatic intervention. This sets a dangerous precedent - incumbents can now calculate that if they lose elections, waging violence and refusing to step down can facilitate the power sharing government in which they will keep most of their power. This threatens to reverse the gains electoral democracy has made in Africa. Tendi's paper described power sharing governments as the "new coup." Listen

Bill Freund described a number of different models that African states took after independence, and particularly in response to pressures from the West for structural adjustment and other reforms. At one end of the spectrum were countries like Ghana who "did everything they were supposed to do." This, Freund argued, was a good strategy - the West didn't dare to let Ghana fail, since it was setting such a positive example of compliance. Thus, aid money had to keep coming. A second group violated a lot of the ideas a lot of the time, but still did fairly well. Freund listed Rwanda, Uganda, and Ethiopia as examples of this group - states which are hardly democratic, but West reamins committed to them. In the third group, Freund said, were countries like Gabon and Cameroon. They had "elections," but their dictators stayed in power, and made the system work for them.

Zimbabwe, Freund said, could have gone the route of Zambia, but Mugabe took the rogue state option instead. But Zimbabwe doesn't have the resources that, for example, Hugo Chavez can leverage in Venezuela. The result has been the collapse of the system. The very heart of Zimbabwean capitalism, Freund argued, those very profitable commercial farms, have been ruined. Freund argued that most rogue states better resourced than Zimbabwe - and possibly better managed.

Claude Kabemba discussed his reaction to some of the points made during the two days of the conference. He said that in 1980, Zimbabwe was very different from the rest of Africa. But today, Zimbabwe is quite similar to most other African states and societies, particularly in terms of the challenges it faces and the issues raised in the newspaper headlines.

Kabemba said that, with the exception of Swaziland, African countries have chosen multi-party democracy. But they are reluctant to implement it according to the democratic rules. Instead, he said, politics is about accessing power and maintaining power by all means. The rules of democracy are not followed as they should be. The reluctance to change is an attempt to maintain power. This is happening across the continent, with the exceptional case of Ghana, which has deliberately decided to apply the democratic rules. Listen

Kabemba also expressed his concern with continued instances of rule by a strong man, not by instuttions. There is a cult of the strong person who leads - both in ruling parties and in opposition parties.

He also discussed the economic decline being seen across Africa, and his concerns that that decline is also linked to some kind of growth happening in some of the countries. What you are seeing, he said, is a call for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) across the continent. There is still a belief that Africa will be saved by external support. But that FDI, when you look at it, is jumping spaces. It is going to where minerals are, oil is, and timber is. So the challenge is to move out of the pillage model of exploiting minerals through the elite. When we embraced democracy, Kabembe argued, we thought we would have control of resources. But we still don't - the game has changed. Now we are negotiating contracts, but we are failing to negotiate equitable contracts, because they've told us that FDI is more important than resources. You have to consider your tax system so that you don't tax the investors too much. No country has developed through taxation of minerals, Kabembe argued. How do we maximize benefits of minerals, he asked. Listen

Roger Southall argued that the state in Africa no longer has a monopoly on violence. Society has been militarised, he said, but there has also been a devolution of security functions to private companies. Thus, he argued, there is a need to rethink civil / military relations and democratisation.

Luise White argued that Zimbabwe has a unique place on the African continent. There is, she argued, much about it that demands a certain specificity. Nevertheless, we've engaged the language that makes it like everywhere else in Africa. She said that the phrase "colonial Zimbabwe" is a misnomer - it wasn't a colony, it was a self-declared independent state. But calling it "colonial" is a good way to describe it when you don't want to give Southern Rhodesia with discursive credibility.

White also warned that governments of national unity simply reinvent the one party state with more international clout than the one party state has had since the 1960's. She said this is retrogressive. There is now a single party apparatus that has access to international funding and donor participation. Listen

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