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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 81
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
July 05, 2012
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Zimbabwe
Civil Society Advocacy Mission to Namibia
This week Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition is leading a delegation of civil society representatives
on an advocacy mission in Namibia to raise awareness on several
critical issues affecting Zimbabwe's difficult political transition.
This comes at
a time when, in a move indicative of escalating persecution and
intimidation, earlier this week, Zimbabwe's police issued
summons to Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum's Executive Director, Able Chikomo
to appear in court on 25 July for trial on spurious charges of allegedly
running an 'illegal organization.'
Although SADC
has brokered a roadmap to free and fair elections, signed to by
Zimbabwe's political principals, the central challenge remains
that of total lack of political will and sincerity in implementing
agreed reforms and agreeing to critical reforms. Political parties
remain locked in negotiations
over a new constitution, which at best, will result in a compromise
document and a package of superficial reforms that can be put forward
to justify the holding of elections.
But those elections
will not be within a conducive environment and certainly will not
enable Zimbabweans to freely express their will. Members of the
security forces, particularly certain military leaders, continue
to entrench themselves in partisan politics. The military factor,
coupled with access to resources from diamond revenue and the opaque
indigenization, program are the driving factors for rapid democratic
regression.
Some military
and central intelligence chiefs are after political power, clearly
planning for life after Mugabe, to secure their economic and personal
security interests driven by an obvious fear of prosecution should
there be democratic regime change in the country. It is unlikely
that assurances of immunity and safety will be accepted by the security
chiefs if given by the domestic political actors without a strong
regional backing.
For external
players like Namibia, SADC, the AU, UN and the rest of the international
community, the way to arrest democratic regression and ensure the
complete separation of the military from political affairs would
be to make it abundantly clear that military rule, no matter how
disguised, will not be condoned.
SADC must devise
a mechanism to urgently deal with the non-implementation of various
plans agreed to under Global
Political Agreement. Otherwise the road to yet another disastrous
election will be paved with beautifully worded agreements and commitments
that no-one puts into practice.
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