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The shadow of elections - Zimbabwe Update No.4
Brian Raftopoulos, Solidarity Peace Trust
March 09, 202
http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/1150/spt-zimbabwe-update-no-4-june-2011-the-shadow-of-elections/#more-1150
A great tragedy
of the Mugabe regime has been the deconstruction of national institutions,
which some analysts have mistaken for a 'radicalised state.'
In effect Zimbabweans have witnessed a destructive form of vanguardist
politics in which a particular party has claimed the right to speak
for the majority and in so doing has turned its back on the establishment
of stable, functioning national institutions, through which the
generality of Zimbabwean citizens could hold those in power to account.
In the process, on the one hand, the messaging from the most arrogant
section of this elite has increasingly been couched in terms of
a priestly imposition of a selective dogma, dressed in a nationalist
cloth that provides precious little cover for most of the population.
Additionally, through control over the centralised structures of
coercion in the country, key members of the security sector have
spawned informalised structures of violence that threaten once again
to mar the prospects for a generally acceptable election outside
of a fuller implementation of the GPA.
On the other
hand the countries of the West, through an increasingly problematic
sanctions regime, have added to the political gridlock in Zimbabwe
in the guise of being the arbiters of global human rights. In the
face of the inconsistencies in the application of the 'right
to protect' by the Atlantic emporium in contemporary global
politics, this potentially noble project is in danger of being cast
as yet another form of imperial arrogance.
At present the
rush to elections by a beleaguered party of liberation must be set
against this broader context, and the dangers that a rapid descent
into a plebiscite are likely to bring upon Zimbabwean citizens.
In a useful article in the Zimbabwe Independent 17th February 2012
('Zimbabwe: Elections in 2012 or GPA/GNU 11'), Ibbo
Mandaza clearly spelt out the current dangers in rushing to the
polls, pointing in particular to the persistent economic problems
that marked the debacle of 2008, and the narrow interests of sections
of the securocratic elite. My concern in this discussion will focus
more on the regional and international dimensions of the current
political challenges.
Since late last
year the SADC mediation lost some momentum as the facilitator, President
Zuma and his team were caught up in the internal problems of the
ANC, the centenary celebrations of the South African ruling party,
and the machinations of the election over the new head of the African
Union. Thus the momentum and promise built up by the more critical
position taken towards Zanu PF at the SADC summit
in Livingstone in March 2011, lost some of its force as the year
wore on. The intended meeting between the facilitator and the GPA
Principals to discuss outstanding issues of the agreement has yet
to take place, and the lull in the mediation has spurred Mugabe
and those in Zanu PF keen on an early election, into renewed pressure
for such an event.
It is therefore
imperative for SADC to maintain their current stand on the implementation
of the GPA before elections, as the regional body remains the major
force with the diplomatic muscle to block the destructive rush to
an election that the country is not prepared for. A key part of
the Mbeki mediation from 2007 was that the Zimbabwean political
parties and SADC retain control of the mediation process. In this
regards he proposed that the 'principal task of the international
community is to encourage and support the united effort of the people
of Zimbabwe and leaders of Zimbabwe and to find a solution to their
problems, at all costs avoiding any temptation to divide these people
and leaders, regardless of the ways and means that might be used
to foment such division.'
This basic proposition
has continued to guide the Zuma mediation and the current SADC position.
However it is imperative that the regional body ensures that the
fight to protect the sovereignty of the region from destructive
outside interference is matched by an equal determination to ensure
the protection of the democratic and human rights in each of the
countries in the region. This balance of imperatives was not always
apparent in the Mbeki mediation, notwithstanding his important role
in pushing the mediation through in Zimbabwe, and SADC has yet to
ensure this dual mandate in the country. Pressure on SADC must be
maintained to add new momentum to the facilitation process and ensure
that the fatigue with the Zimbabwe problem inside the regional body
does not lead to its willingness to accept minimal electoral conditions
that do not meet the conditions set out in the GPA.
Another problematic
factor in the Zimbabwe equation is the current role of the EU and
the US. From the beginning of the mediation both these bodies were
at best skeptical of the process and at worst cynical about its
outcomes. Once the GPA was signed there was a largely luke warm
response to the agreement, marked by a combination of humanitarian
assistance and the continued use of the sanctions or targeted measures
imposed in the early 2000's, to influence the outcome of the
process, contrary to the content of the agreement and the official
positions of the signatories of the parties and guarantors of the
agreement. What could have been a moment at which the sanctions
were, at least suspended as the basis for a broader political re-engagement,
provided the pretext for a persistent contestation, and the lack
of consensus between African and Western countries on this issue.
Thus unlike the Kenyan agreement, negotiated by Koffi Annan with
the full support of the Western countries, the Zimbabwean GPA has
been bogged down by the continuing dispute between SADC, and the
West over the implementation of the GPA.
Recently two
important initiatives have attempted to move the debate on sanctions
forward. Firstly a report by the International Crisis Group on the
6 February 2012 broadly advocated, amongst other recommendations,
for a combination of a comprehensive review of the targeted measures
and greater flexibility in its implementation, with the continued
use of sanctions as a strategy. Similarly on the 17th February the
EU, in order to 'encourage further progress in the implementation
of the GPA,' removed 51 individuals and 20 'entities'
from the visa ban and asset freeze list, while also keeping the
rest of the sanctions in place. The central problem with the approach
taken by both these initiatives is that while there is an implicit
recognition that pressure from the sanctions has not produced the
broader political changes they had intended, and become counter-productive
in the context of the GPA, the use of the sanctions remains a central
part of the diplomatic approach of the Western countries towards
the continuing problems of the GPA. This approach has been at odds
with both the GPA and the SADC position, and ensured a persistent
dissonance in the position of the regional body and the West over
the matter. The major benefactor of this disagreement has been Zanu
PF which has since 2009 wielded the sanctions issue as another example
of the West's paternalist approach to African initiatives.
In the broader context of the AU's marginalization in Libya
and the Ivory Coast, this message has resonated strongly in the
region.
It is instructive
to compare the current period in Zimbabwean politics with that leading
up to the Lancaster House agreement. One of the major factors that
determined the transition to independence in 1980 was the convergence
of pressures on the national forces from regional and international
players in the 'Rhodesian Question' in the late 1970's.
These included: the pressure from the South African Government on
the Smith regime for a settlement in the context of the Apartheid
regime's reformulation of its strategic interests at this
time; the influence of the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting
in Lusaka in August 1979 in pushing the Thatcher government into
not accepting the Internal Settlement and instead agreeing to a
constitutional conference of all the major parties; and the decisive
position of Front Line States and the Cuban Government in persuading
the Patriotic Front to attend the Lancaster House Conference.
In the present
context there is a much weaker alignment of regional and international
forces. In particular there is a lack of a strong consensus between
SADC and the Western countries, while the Commonwealth is no longer
a key factor in the Zimbabwe negotiations. This lack of aligned
pressure has allowed greater space for the obstructive forces in
Zanu PF to operate, and played an important role in Mugabe's
attempts to undermine the GPA and call for an early election. At
this stage, notwithstanding the serious risks involved, it may prove
a way forward for SADC, the EU and the US to agree to the following:
Suspension of the sanctions on the basis of, and in recognition
of, an agreed road map by the GPA partners, rather than waiting
for a full implementation of the GPA; an agreement between the regional
and international players that in the event of another failed election
precipitated by the coercive forces in Zanu PF, the sanctions would
be reintroduced with the support of SADC.
A continued
stalemate over this issue is not likely to improve the prospects
for a democratic transition in the country, and the growing concern
on the continent over the West's disregard for continental
institutions is likely to strengthen Mugabe's hand.
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