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Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 78
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
June 13, 2012
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Attempts
to Distract Zuma/SADC Must be Countered
On Thursday
8 June, a policy and civic research institute, Sapes
Trust, hosted a public discussion that included as speakers,
three of the Government
of National Unity (GNU) negotiators and government Ministers
Tendai Biti, (MDC-T), Priscilla Misihairambwi- Mushonga (MDC-N)
and Patrick Chinamasa (ZANU PF) to speak on the on-going SADC mediation
process and status of the GNU. Also in attendance was South Africa
Ambassador to Zimbabwe Vusi Mavimbela. The discussion was meant
to focus on the future of Zimbabwe in light of the recent SADC Luanda
summit at which SADC spoke with one voice on the need for the three
GNU parties to complete the constitutional
review process, agree on an election roadmap and thereafter
hold a general election.
The decision by SADC has not gone well with hawks in ZANU PF who
were hoping for SADC support for a 2012 election. This frustration
is boiling over as seen by a frontal attack on the South Africa
Ambassador and President Zuma by ZANU PF Politburo Member Jonathan
Moyo and others like Goodson Nguni. The two were puffed by the Ambassador's
explanation that the SADC Heads of States Summit had essentially
adopted the SADC Troika report
which explains in detail the steps the Zimbabwe GNU parties must
take towards getting SADC endorsement for an election.
Jonathan Moyo
accused the Ambassador of not only being unschooled in diplomacy
but failing to read the SADC communiqué well. Twice the clearly
irritated South African Ambassador explained that the SADC Communiqué
does not have to be a ten-page statement and that if the Troika
report is not disputed either in part or whole then it is officially
adopted as part of the SADC summit resolutions. ZANU PF representatives
at the meeting went overboard in their attacks on South Africa.
Minister Chinamasa was the first to state that South Africa's
President Jacob Zuma is merely facilitating and cannot dictate to
the GNU parties what to do. In the public discussion Moyo and Nguni
went for Zuma and South Africa, declaring Zimbabwe's sovereignty
and right to self-determination. Nguni who Chinamasa later disowned
in the same meeting was particularly scathing on Zuma and South
Africa, openly accusing the South Africans of siding with the MDC
parties and being biased towards western powers views on Zimbabwe.
Chinamasa who
felt embarrassed by all this later attempted to reverse his statements
saying that he had not attacked President Zuma nor South Africa.
The question is what does ZANU PF's open attack on South Africa
means for Zimbabwe, the SADC mediation process and Zimbabwe relationship
with South Africa? President Robert Mugabe set the tone a few months
ago when he stated that his party could reject Zuma and ask SADC
to nominate a new mediator. The attacks on Zuma and South Africa
by ZANU PF are the execution part of Mugabe's call. The likes
of Moyo and Chinamasa are well aware that it is only South Africa
that stands between them and stampeding Zimbabwe into another election.
ZANU PF is spoiling for an open confrontation with Zuma and South
Africa so as to draw in SADC to discuss the relationship between
Zuma, as the mediator and ZANU PF. This will likely result in Mugabe's
allies in SADC asking Zuma to step aside or softening his tough
stance on Mugabe's demand for a 2012 election.
ZANU PF is throwing
everything at Zuma in an attempt to continue widening divisions
in SADC on the question of a 2012 election more so with a view at
getting SADC to endorse that election demand under the barest of
electoral reforms. The push by SADC for far reaching electoral reforms
is not going well with ZANU PF as this will threaten its well known
and rehearsed strategy of violence and manipulation of electoral
systems. The other strategy by ZANU PF is to minimise the influence
of South Africa not only on SADC but in China and Russia by labelling
South Africa a lackey of western powers and a regime change advocate
in Zimbabwe. The support of these two international powers is key
to ZANU PF's international strategy and survival.
While ZANU PF
is sticking to its script of a demand for an election, this script
has nothing on electoral reforms nor a guarantee of peace. ZANU
PF will continue making this demand and even more vociferously so
in the coming few months in an attempt to elevate elections as the
only issue that SADC and the GNU must deal with ignoring the re-form
agenda. There is need for civil society and the MDC parties to ignore
ZANU PF on its election call and demand and concentrate on the demand
for reforms whether elections will be in 2013 or whatever period.
The underlying issue is that there should be far reaching reforms
before elections are held. There is equally a need to bolster the
South African mediation with support as well as awareness raising
and advocacy with other SADC member states, more so targeting unhinged
leaders like Zambia's Michael Sata. There is need to support
Zuma/SADC to stay the course on Zimbabwe.
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