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Formal
structures of power in rural Zimbabwe
Derek
Matyszak, Research and Advocacy Unit Zimbabwe
November
16, 2010
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In February, 2000 ZANU
PF's first ever loss at the polls in a nationwide referendum
on a new constitution precipitated a political crisis, which has
continued to the present. The most alarming aspect of this loss
for ZANU PF was that it was apparent that many rural voters, on
whom ZANU PF could usually rely, had withdrawn support. A significant
proportion of these voters were perceived by ZANU PF to be farm
labourers in thrall to their white commercial farmer employers.
With a general election pending in June of that year, ZANU PF moved
swiftly to re-establish complete control over the country side.
Under the guise of land reform, white commercial farms were invaded,
farm workers killed, beaten, raped and displaced, and militia bases
established on the occupied land. These bases were used as the spring
board for a reign of terror in the countryside.
Part of the strategy
to regain control over the rural areas included a centrally organised
campaign, commencing in 2001, to disrupt local government and to
dislodge government personnel seen as an impediment to the reassertion
of ZANU PF hegemony. War veterans closed Rural District Council
offices, schools and clinics and brought community income generating
projects (such as CAMPFIRE) to a halt. Teachers, nurses, local councillors
and district administrators were removed from their posts. Some
were re-admitted after vetting by a local war veterans committee,
but most were replaced, often by poorly educated persons appointed
by the veterans committee on the basis of nepotism and cronyism.
Needless to say, the statutory requirements for appointment and
dismissal were ignored other than in a few notable instances.
As a complement to this
process, in the early to mid-2000s, ZANU PF began to exploit the
possibility of co-opting traditional leaders as allies in the campaign
for rural control, adopting a carrot and stick approach. Chiefs
were encouraged to exercise the extensive powers over rural communities
that had been restored to them by way of the Traditional Leaders
Act (see below), and were threatened with removal from their positions
or discontinuance of state allowances if those under their jurisdiction
voted against ZANU PF. These tactics proved successful in by-elections
in Gutu (Masvingo Province) and Lupane (Matabeleland North) in 2004,
and were adopted nationwide for the general election of 2005. Compliant
Chiefs thus have used their powers to evict people from villages,
prevent opposition political parties from campaigning and to control
the distribution of food aid on a politically partisan basis. The
alliance between traditional leaders and ZANU PF became explicit
with the allocation of youth militia as "security" details
to Chiefs in the two Matabeleland Provinces and the Midlands in
2004. This arrangement has been extended geographically and continued
to the present, though the militia details have been replaced in
some instances by official, but ZANU PF aligned, "Youth Development
Officers".
The elections of March
2008, saw the MDC take control of (and win a significant number
of seats on) numerous Rural District Councils (see below) which
had hitherto been dominated almost exclusively by ZANU PF. The effect
of this on ZANU PF's prior strategy and ZANU PF's reaction,
requires further research. However, it is presently clear that,
with the possibility of elections taking place in 2011, ZANU PF
has sought to shore up its alliance with traditional leaders as
a means of exercising local control. Furthermore, where local councils
are in the hands of MDC, it has sought to use the traditional leadership
and central government control over local councils to circumvent
rural councils as a focus of local political power. Determining
the present extent, mechanisms and success of this strategy will
require extensive field research. Remarkably little attention has
been paid to this technology of power to date. This paper sets out
the formal structures of local governance in this context and exposes
current information gaps in the function and dysfunction of local
governance as a prelude and invitation to further research in this
area.
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