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Elections and national healing; which one should come before the
other
Mass
Public Opinion Institute
February 24, 2011
Speakers:
1. Rev. Ancelimo
Magaya, Zimbabwe Christian Alliance.
2. Hon. Moses
Mzila Ndlovu: Co-Minister, Organ on National Healing, Reconciliation
and Integration.
3. Hon. Sekai
M. Holland, Co-Minister, Organ On National Healing, Reconciliation
and Integration.
4. Cde Zvakanyorwa
W. Sadomba, Lecturer in Sociology, University
of Zimbabwe.
Moderator
Mr. Chales Mangongera
The seminar
held under the topic, “Elections and National
Healing; Which one Should Come Before the Other?” was
held at the New Ambassador Hotel on the 24th of February 2011. Four
invited presenters turned up to give their presentations. About
70 people attended the meeting.
All speakers
started by recognizing the Organ on national healing as responsible
for ensuring that national healing and reconciliation is possible.
Nonetheless, the speakers emphasised the point that the Organ had
no power to enforce national healing. The observation was clearly
made by Hon Sekai M. Holland who said, as one of the people seating
on the Organ, their mandate was unfortunately narrowly limited to
an advisory role. The same was pointed out by Pastor Ancelimo Magaya
who noted that the ‘Organ has no Act which empowers it to
stamp out political violence’. According to Hon Sekai M. Holland,
national healing is possible for free and fair elections if every
Zimbabwean could understand the purpose of the institutions that
were set up through GPA
to attempt to ensure democracy. These institutions were mentioned
as follows:
1) COPAC
2) Organ on
National Healing
3) Work Plan
in the Office of the Prime Minister
4) Modernisation
Programme in the Office of the President
Addressing the
questions of how to ensure national healing before elections, Pastor
Ancelimo Magaya observed that ‘delayed elections will not
necessarily translate into national healing’. For national
healing to be a success, it is supposed to follow a clearly laid
down road map with the principals to the GPA publicly denouncing
violence, and with the help of SADC, AU, and UN peace monitors.
He also expressed his displeasure with the public media’s
continued churning out of partisan jingles noting that these do
not support the spirit of national
healing and reconciliation. He concluded his speech with the
observation that ‘credible elections can be a tool for national
healing’.
The speakers
seemed to share same views that national healing should precede
elections in order that for the elections to be considered legitimate
and a reflection of the democratic will of the people. Hon Moses
Mzila Ndlovu, for example, emphatically refused to consider it a
chicken and- egg question. He argued that ‘if Zimbabwe has
a people who are who have found justice elusive, then it has a people
who are maginalised and that it has a problem’. For him national
healing is ‘far more involving and has to be carried out in
a careful manner’ because it the ‘first condition for
elections’. Violence does not allow people to vote freely
and is an infringement on their rights. Peace through national healing
was considered a pre-requisite. While his views were shared by all
the speakers, Comrade Sadomba presented a broader and slightly different
view of the topic. Cde Sadomba argued that national healing cannot
be adequately situated in the context
of 2008 elections alone. He identified four major national wounds
as pre-colonial, colonization, the process of liberation and post
colonial. Post-colonial wounds included ethnic, partisan, power
struggle and selfish political aims. His major diverging views were
expressed in his observations that ‘national healing has not
been shown to be a precondition of elections in the history of nations’.
From the premise that ‘elections are an event and national
healing protracted process that could take even a century to accomplish’,
Comrade Sadomba rhetorically asked: ‘How can you real a colonial
wound? How can you heal the wound of international healing?’
For the speaker, just like what happened in 1980, elections can
be held when due while national healing continues ‘far beyond
elections’.
The speakers
submitted that elections held in an environment of political intolerance
do not produce a legitimate result. All speakers lampooned continued
violence as impeding efforts to heal the national, and called upon
the office bearers dissociate themselves with followers who commit
acts of violence.
After the presentations,
the audience had time to ask questions. Except for Pastor Ancelimo
Magaya the other three speakers had to justify their presentations.
One lady in the audience wanted Cde Sadomba to explain what he meant
by his comments that ‘elections were just an event-’
given that a lot of people died in the process. A self confessed
Zanu-PF participant, Goodson Nguni commented that the MDC wanted
to postpone elections so that they register Zimbabweans in South
Africa first. Whilst he did not wait for a response, his comments
infuriated Honourable Moses Mzilla who went at length explaining
about people’s democratic rights to vote regardless of where
they are during the time of voting. It was through the intervention
of the coordinator after 2000 hours that brought the seminar to
its conclusion.
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