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Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 83
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
July 18, 2012
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Supreme
Court Ruling and Violence to Spin Zimbabwe Out of Control
The Zimbabwe
Supreme court ruled last week that President Robert Mugabe must
call for elections in three constituencies in Matabeleland. This
is after the dismissal of the three legislators by their party,
the smaller MDC led by Welshman Ncube for defecting to the mainstream
MDC party led by Morgan Tsvangirai. The Government
of National Unity, in the hope of preserving peace, had put
a moratorium on elections and so far Zimbabwe has more than 20 vacant
parliamentary and senatorial seats owing to deaths and dismissals.
While the Supreme
Court judgement was still being digested, MDC-T was under siege
when more than 120 armed soldiers and hundreds of ZANU PF supporters
besieged the party's Secretary General and Finance Minister Tendai
Biti disrupting a rally planned for Darwendale a farming community
outside Harare. The two events, distant from each other as they
appear, however speak to the challenges facing the country in the
next few weeks. This after the Supreme Court said elections must
be held in the three constituencies and by inference in all other
vacant constituencies by 31 August 2012. This gives the political
leadership at least 5 weeks to prepare for the elections, that is
look for the money and jolt the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission into
action.
The ZANU PF
side of the GNU has already declared, "when a defeat tests
so sweet" in reference to the Supreme Court ruling. In other
words ZANU PF feels vindicated by the ruling which not only speaks
to its [ZANU PF] call for an early election but also supports the
argument that the GNU is subverting the right of people to democratically
elect their preferred political leadership. ZANU PF's is savouring
this ruling which on paper is a loss to Mugabe but politically a
boost to a demand for an election by the same person. This, in other
words is a ruling out of time owing to the changed political circumstances
in the country. The issue is that President Mugabe will be under
pressure from the hawks in his party and security sector to hold
the elections in the three constituencies as proof that Zimbabwe
is indeed ready for an election.
ZANU PF is also
likely to argue that it makes no sense to hold elections in three
constituencies and rather elections should be held in all constituencies
including for the Presidency. It is in rare moments in life when
Supreme Court rulings fit so squarely with political plans of the
dominant political party. Resources will be stampeded from secret
diamonds slash funds controlled by the military and intelligence
to facilitate the holding of elections in the three constituencies
or whole country under the old Lancaster House constitution.
ZANU PF now has more ammunition in its armour to call for the speedy
finalisation of the new constitution or a return to the old constitutional
order.
ZANU PF will
again pour its ill-gotten resources [in this drought year] to buy-votes
and intimidate opponents and "win" the by elections
as way of boosting its supports base and mobilise its supporters
and structures.
The Supreme
Court ruling is a serious test case for the political leadership
as it leaves little if any time for manoeuvre by the leadership
without falling foul of the law or ruling. This brings us to the
other issue in this whole conundrum, the events in Darwendale over
the weekend. It apparently took the intervention, not of the MDC
Co-Home Affairs Minister Theresa Makone, but the Defence Minister
and ZANU PF s legal Affairs Secretary Emmerson Mngangwa and Intelligence
Minister Sydney Sekeramayi to have the soldiers fall back to wherever
they came from. This is despite the fact that the MDC-T rally had
been cleared by the police and a senior member, Tendai Biti, was
addressing the same rally. Soldiers and ZANU PF supporters were
heard clearly shouting that the MDC was not welcome in that area
and will not be allowed to carry out any political activity. The
soldiers and the ZANU PF supporters destroyed MDC posters and pulled
down the stage set in the stadium for the rally. Mind you these
were not senior army officers but junior rank soldiers who are however
thoroughly brainwashed and will take whatever instruction. This
refutes the often peddled untruth that junior soldiers are professional
and will not accept to be used by the seniors. This notion is a
fallacy and need to be dismissed by any right thinking Zimbabwean
as evidence on the ground clearly shows that the junior ranks are
as equally brainwashed as the Generals.
There might be one or two professional soldiers but in numbers they
won't make much difference. Interestingly the MDC party supporters
made a beeline to the nearest police station to report the assaults
by ZANU PF supporters and soldiers. The police not only stated their
own fear of the soldiers but went on to arrest two MDC supporters
on allegations of assault. Tendai Biti made the mistake of emotionally
declaring that his party will retaliate if attacked. This statement
has been noted and will come back to haunt the MDC party. First
the party has no capacity to fight a professional army and secondly
the party should promote peace even under intense provocation. This
is the message that Biti and team need to be aware of and that any
reckless statement will be used by ZANU PF to justify, and instigate
more violence against the MDC supporters. The next few weeks are
going to be full of drama and interesting as we wait to see how
the political leadership reacts to this crisis. The Supreme Court
ruling might as well result in Zimbabwe spinning out of control
yet again.
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