THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • New Constitution-making process - Index of articles


  • Zimbabwe Transition Barometer - Issue 1
    Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (SA Regional Office)
    October 17, 2012

    Download this document
    - Acrobat PDF version (1.5MB)
    If you do not have the free Acrobat reader on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking here

    Introduction

    The signing of the Global Political Agreement (GPA) in September 2008 and the subsequent formation of the Government of National Unity (GNU) marked what many termed as the formal transition of Zimbabwe from a repressive and authoritarian state to a democratic one. The projection was that the GPA would provide the medium through which the process towards full democratisation would be attained. Although the GPA was seen as a compromise agreement, most democrats assumed it offered the first in a series of "step-wise" movements towards democracy. The key to realising such a projection was hinged on the capacity to fully implement the agreement. With the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) as guarantors of the agreement, their role in influencing full implementation was always going to be pivotal.

    Whereas SADC's thrust during the period 2009-2010 was to push for the full implementation of the GPA; in 2011 the regional body was consumed with the conception of electoral reforms. In 2012 attention shifted to just one of the election road map issues - the constitution - assumed to be the central component of the reform process.

    The failure by SADC to influence implementation of each phase of reform added to ZANU PF's deliberate reform diversion strategies threaten to override the imperative transition to democracy. The outstanding issues in the election road map and the incessant disruption of the constitution writ-ing process will inevitably compromise key steps of the democratisation process.

    There are indications that SADC's key interest in Zimbabwe may now merely be the need to restore political stability; without necessarily estab-lishing sustainable democracy foundations. The transition to a full democ-racy is therefore under threat as it may in the end be relegated to a mere stability-building process. This may still result in a functional state, howev-er devoid of key democracy tenets.

    The Zimbabwe Transition Barometer is therefore meant to:

    • highlight the critical issues; which the current political process and mediation may disregard yet are key determinants to building dem-ocratic foundations in Zimbabwe;
    • trace the progress towards democracy-building, focussing on gaps that exist and their likely impact in the democratisation process
    • highlight possible scenarios that may arise from key deficits in the democratisation process
    • theorise and offer practical solutions for civil society and relevant stakeholders working on the democratisation of Zimbabwe

    Our review is based on the transition process signposts as interpreted from the GPA; election road map; and relevant SADC communique. The shift-ing dynamics in Zimbabwe's socio-economic and political landscape are also key informants to the analysis. Seven key transition process signposts (termed as "Barometer indicators") will form the basis of analysis. These barometer indicators are: national healing; preparation of new voters' roll; constitution process; monitoring the GPA; national economy; media reforms; and land question. Each will be evaluated based on: its derivation/connection to the GPA/election roadmap/SADC communique; key prevail-ing issues; effects on the democratisation process; barometer indicator scorecard (rating of its implementation); likely scenarios that may evolve and key recommendations for policy-makers/civil society/political players/SADC et cetera.

    Download full document

    Visit the Crisis in Zimbabwe fact sheet

    Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.

    TOP