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The spell of indecision in Zim politics
Brian Raftopoulos, Solidarity Peace Trust
December 18, 2011
Viewing the
broad spectrum of the political landscape in Zimbabwe at the end
of 2011, one is left with the distinct impression that all the political
forces are caught under a spell of indecision. The dilemmas of leadership
renewal, electoral strategy and a broad vision for the future are
all inducing a sense of hesitancy, that in the case of Zanu PF,
manifests itself in renewed aggression and political hubris. Moreover
if the Wikileaks reports have any validity this sense of uncertainty
is not new, as all parties have, over the last decade, sought out
the father confessor of the American Embassy to vent their fears
and schizophrenic party psyches, none more so than the outwardly
macho Zanu PF.
To start with
Zanu PF, it is clear that the decision at the recent Bulawayo conference
of the party to nominate Mugabe once again as the presidential candidate
for the next election tells us a great deal about a party that is
simply unable, at this stage, to visualise a regenerative strategy
outside of its octogenarian leader. The lack of trust in an open
discussion over the succession issue, is based on a party that fears
its own internal contradictions and history as much as it does the
judgement of an open and fair plebiscite. Zanu PF is also a party
that assumes that the Zimbabwean state is its private property and
therefore finds it difficult to understand any other means to secure
its ill- gotten gains except through the continued stranglehold
over the military- security apparatus. For all these reasons and
more Mugabe and his party remain the major obstacle to political
progress in Zimbabwe. Yet Mugabe and his party are not about to
disappear and their future, even if it may not be a long one for
the President, must be a part of any longer term settlement in the
country.
Tsvangirai's
MDC have their own set of doubts. A popularly elected party that
was denied the fruits of victory, the party has had to confront
the challenges of learning statecraft in an inclusive government
with a ruthless, violent and wily 'partner'. This challenge
has had to be undertaken with a party apparatus that requires a
huge amount of organisational strengthening and capacity building,
and which has had its fair share of problems with internal accountability
and intra-party violence. The recent personal problems of Morgan
Tsvangirai have added to the leadership struggles that have also
emerged in the MDC-T.
The smaller
MDC formation led by Welshman Ncube faces an even greater sense
of uncertainty about its future, as a result of an ongoing legal
battle over the leadership, continued defection of its membership,
and the knowledge that its current survival depends on its capacity
to manoeuvre between the two major parties. Added to this is the
constant vilification that this formation and its leader have had
to face from all sides in Zimbabwe.
For their part
the regional and international players in Zimbabwean politics confront
their own uncertainties. After the more critical position taken
on the Mugabe regime in Livingstone in March
this year, SADC followed this up with resolutions in Sandton and
Luanda that endorsed this position, even if in less critical language.
However there has been a lull in the SA mediation in the last quarter
of 2011 with President Zuma, confronted with his own set of problems
in the ANC, slow to take up some key outstanding issues in the GPA.
Foremost amongst these challenges is the problem of the role of
the security sector in the next election. This is an issue that
the negotiators have been unable to resolve and have therefore determined
that the matter can only be taken up by Zuma and the Principals
in Zimbabwe. Zuma's hesitation around this issue echoes Mbeki's
unwillingness to deal with it in the discussions leading to the
GPA, but it remains the central problem in the political equation.
SADC's
work has been made more difficult by its differences with the EU
and the US over the continued sanctions policy of these countries,
and the often mixed messages that have been sent out on this issue
by the MDCs and the civic movement. For their part it appears that
the EU, in particular, are aware of the limited and even counter-productive
effects of the sanctions policy, but are more concerned about saving
face with their own domestic constituencies, than with the problematic
effects of this policy on the politics of the Inclusive Government.
Moreover the global politics of human rights has too often been
associated with a politics of regime change, making it difficult
for human rights defenders in Zimbabwe to articulate this discourse
in the face of nationalist pronouncements.
It is clear
therefore that if there is indecision in Zimbabwean politics it
is based on the growing complexity of the problem and the increasing
need for a more assertive mediation process. In the current politics
of Southern Africa this mediation can only be led effectively by
SADC, with all its weaknesses, with both the EU and the US finding
ways to strengthen rather than undermine this process. The central
objective of the SADC mediation leading to the GPA was to establish
the conditions for a free and fair election. That objective remains
to be fulfilled and it is the processes leading to the next election,
more than the timing of it, that are the most important factors
to keep in focus.
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Peace Trust fact
sheet
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