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2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
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Election
Bulletin #2
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
March 08, 2002
Falling from
grace - a chronicle of a crisis
1995-1997
In 1996, President
Mugabe runs for elections in a poll that is marked by the lowest
voter turn out since post independence. With no convincing candidates
to oppose him, he wins the poll, but there is a need to play down
the fact that voters have so little faith in elections and leadership
that they don’t feel that their vote will change anything.
Zimbabwe is
under structural adjustment programmes and the strain on the social
well being of the population is beginning to tell. The major economic
question is government overspending fuelling inflation and high
interest rates. Exorbitant lifestyles of those in high political
office come increasingly under the spotlight, as corruption scandal
after scandal emerges. The President’s extravagant wedding to his
mistress emphasizes on the one hand, the double standards and moral
decrepitude of the regime, and on the other the gap between the
now established class of high fliers and the masses whose impoverishment
intensifies each passing day with ESAP-associated retrenchments,
declining social services, and a moribund land redistribution programme.
Meanwhile the
government decides to send troops to the DRC to defend the regime
of Laurent Kabila. The governments’ argument that it is acting in
the context of regional cooperation and solidarity barely cuts ice
with a general public where, amongst other things, HIV/AIDs is ravaging
the population thanks to an underfunded health service.
A faction of
war veterans normally affiliated to ZANU-PF, large numbers of whom
are living in poverty despite their role in the liberation struggle
mount vigorous anti-government demonstrations including a march
on State House and a blockage of the OAU summit. They are awarded
gratuities despite the alreadly bloated government deficit. Regardless
of sympathies with the war veterans’ cause, there is also a sense
that the liberation struggle was one that other groups contributed
to, without having ever received recognition or compensation. The
cost of the government’s buy off of the war veterans is a crash
of the Zimbabwe dollar.
Nonetheless,
Zimbabwe is doing well internationally. It maintains a reputation
as a peaceful, stable and pleasant country, developing into a leading
tourist venue in Africa and a gateway to the Southern African region.
Thanks to a relatively independent judicial system and a certain
desire of the government to appear to respect the rule of law, democratic
spaces remain somewhat open, even though, with an active internal
security force, it is only the intrepid few who dare test the system
to its limits.
However, civil
society is becoming increasingly assertive and vocal, with the formation
of pressure groups of different tendencies. Black entrepreneurs
excluded from the formal economy with little government support
to facilitate their entry, trade unions representing workers who
are groaning under the weight of economic hardships and holding
long standing grievances in relation to workes’ rights, human rights
organisations with increasing popular membership campaigning against
abuses of power by the state, the women’s movement who see the gains
of their struggles frequently reversed. 1997 is a landmark when
a large coalitions is formed as the National Constitutional Assembly
having identified a common problem in terms of pushing their agendas
– the Constitution.
No credible
opposition has been able to challenge the hegemony of ZANU-PF. However,
splits in the party are beginning to show through with the victory
of Margaret Dongo a former ZANU-PF MP who breaks away from the party
to run as an independent for her seat in the Harare Constituency
of Sunningdale. She loses the election but challenges the result
in court. The court rules that the election should be re-run and
this time she wins and is the only opposition MP in Parliament.
This incident is followed by a spate of similar cases where outspoken
but popular members of the ZANU-PF hierarchy fall out with the leadership,
decide to go it alone, and win their seats in elections.
1998-2000
There is also
continued agitation around the land issue where government is seen
to be dragging its feet, despite a year long Land Tenure Commission
which consults country wide. In a number of locations, land hungry
people conduct spontaneous but non-violent occupations of commercial
farms demanding a faster pace of land redistribution. Government’s
response is to evict these occupiers of the land, but nonetheless
attempts are made to revitalize the land reform process, though
still in a top-down way with the Land Resettlement Phase II programme.
A major donor conference is held, but donors are reticent to put
down money for the programme because of previous cases of corrupt
allocation of farms to ministers ostensibly bought by the state
for redistribution. However, the government has the high moral ground
in some ways, given the inability of the British government to respect
its commitments from the Lancaster House Conference which opened
the way for Zimbabwean independence. The process continues therefore
to be stuck between the British dodging of its commitments, government’s
lack of transparency, the commercial farmers’ blinkered view of
the issue and a large but voiceless majority in favour of redressing
the ills of the past.
The push for
constitutional reform gains ground. With the strong participation
of churches and trade unions, and grassroots NGOs, there is increased
awareness of the fact that the institutional set up for governing
Zimbabwe lends itself to abuses of power by the executive. Issues
such as the DRC war, cronyism masquerading as South-South cooperation
or indigenisation which are draining the countries already meager
fiscus, are pointed to as examples. Within ZANU_PF itself, there
are also calls for change, with younger members of the party calling
for reform, particularly demanding that Parliament should be reformed
to have more powers. Government dismisses these calls, stating that
the Constitution is fine, but finally has to give in with the ZANU-PF
congress itself votes a resolution for constitutional reform. Rather
than work with the National Constitutional Assembly, the government
sets up its own Constitutional Commission which is given a 6 month
target to conduct a popular consultation for a new constitution
which will be put to popular referendum.
An overwhelming
demand from the people during this process is for presidential and
executive powers to be whittled down, and for greater powers to
be given to Parliament. This includes for example the powers of
the President to declare war without consulting Parliament, given
that the DRC war is still highly unpopular. In the final drafting,
these particular demands are not taken into account, and overnight,
the government doctors the Draft agreed by its own Commission. As
predicted by the NCA, which refused to be part of the the Constitutional
Commission, pointing to the problems in the laws regarding Commissions
of enquiry, the final document fails to reflect some of the most
critical elements of the governance issues put forward by the people.
Government’s
strategy to deal with those groups that bring forward complaints
is either cooption – as in the case of the war veterans and the
black affirmative action groups – or opposition. Government still
controls the state media and refuses to liberalise the airwaves.
However, the ghosts of the past still continue to haunt it, such
as the Gukurahundi massacres in Matabeleland. The extent to which
governments sensitivity over the DRC issue is revealed when two
journalists are arrested, detained and tortured by the military
and court orders to release them are ignored.
The Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions manages the unprecedented, staging two
successful mass stayaways in protest at tax and price hikes, making
its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai (also chair of the NCA) a popular
hero. This comes on top of a number of food riots which the army
has to be called in to quell.
With each incident,
life returns to normal, but clearly the tensions are mounting,
the possibilities for dialogue and negotiation are being closed
off and the demands for greater accountability are falling on deaf
and defiant ears. The problem is that the country has no alternative
political force, and it seems that the only option is to continue
to try to negotiate and put pressure on government, appealing to
some of the more progressive thinking elements in ZANU-PF.
2000-2002
The ZCTU decides
at a historical worker’s congress to set up a new party – the Movement
for Democratic Change, which is launched at a 10,000 strong rally
at Rufaro Stadium. Meanwhile, the NCA decides that even though the
odds are stacked against it, it will campaign against the new consitution
at the referendum with a “no” vote. The referendum takes place in
February 2000 by which time the government pulls its joker card,
which has always been the land issue at each election. The new Constitution
- it claims - provides for the government to acquire land compulsorily
and allow it to forge ahead with land redistribution which has been
thwarted by in the courts by commercial farmers and the conditions
imposed by the British government on any disbursement of funds to
back a willing-buyer-willing seller process.
But the governance
issue still sticks foremost in the minds of voters who give a resounding
“no” vote. Government understands well that this is to a large extent
a protest vote and with the legislative elections due in June 2002,
it can see the writing on the wall. The war veterans are remobilized
and the campaign song which the government continues to hammer forth
in the present Presidential campaign takes root. This is the Third
Chimurenga, the battle for land, and against the neo-imperialist
powers whose puppets, the MDC and the NCA, are working for their
white masters to ensure that Zimbabweans lose their land. The argument
is that the draft constitution refused by the people in the referendum
contained provisions for compulsory land acquisition. By campaigning
for a “no” vote, the NCA have clearly shown their lack of sympathy
with the popular cause and their alliance with the former colonialists.
The campaign
also appeals to the dissatisfaction with the government’s inability
to get the economy back on track, claiming that “land is the economy,
the economy is land.” The land occupations, which were previously
frowned upon are launched, lead by brigades and “war veterans” and
ZANU PF youths. The government abandons its Phase II resettlement
programme, going for a fast-track programme in which thousands of
farms of mostly white-owned but also black owned commercial farmland
is designated for compulsory acquisition. The process is accompanied
by a well organized campaign of violence to regain control of the
rural vote during the June elections, which the government narrowly
wins.
Over the two
years that have followed, the government has made sure that it has
stopped all the gaps that allowed its opponents to gain victories
in the referendum and general elections. The strategies have been
deployed in all directions including restructuring the party, dealing
with the judiciary and the media, changing the law and constitution.
Alongside this has been the harassment and violence which has earned
Zimbabwe a permanent place in international news headlines.
If all this
is about how to stay in power, then the government can take credit
for having played the game internationally and domestically very
well. The government strategy has succeeded in creating a stalemate
at the international level, where the voice of the African governments
is critical. Locally, the government has been able to shape and
control the debate, closing off the space for issues like the war
in the DRC, the Constitution and the economy to come to the fore
in the debate. The question is whether the gains from the government’s
creativity and cunning will win the day over the damage done to
its image through brutality and indifference.
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in Zimbabwe fact
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