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Why
Mugabe should go now
Prof Jonathan
Moyo
July
15, 2005
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/news/2005/July/Friday15/2757.html
PERENNIAL wisdom
from divine revelation and human experience dictates that all earthly
things great or small, beautiful or ugly, good or bad, sad or happy,
foolish or wise must finally come to an end. It is from this sobering
reality that the end of executive rule has finally come for Robert
Mugabe who has had his better days after a quarter of a century
in power.
That Mugabe
must now go is thus no longer a dismissible opposition slogan but
a strategic necessity that desperately needs urgent legal and constitutional
action by Mugabe himself well ahead of the presidential election
scheduled for March 2008 in order to safeguard Zimbabwe's national
interest, security and sovereignty.
One does not
need to be a malcontent to see that, after 25 years of controversial
rule and with the economy melting down as a direct result of that
rule, Mugabe's continued stay in office has become such an excessive
burden to the welfare of the state and such a fatal danger to the
public interest of Zimbabweans at home and in the diaspora that
each day that goes by with him in office leaves the nation's survival
at great risk while seriously compromising national sovereignty.
If there is
one unified truth among otherwise divided Zimbabweans, a truth now
also ringing true within key governmental and non-governmental centres
of regional, continental and international opinion, it is that the
country's seven-year-old economic recession will worsen as it gets
wider and deeper beyond fuel shortages unless and until there is
a far-reaching political settlement of the five-year-old Zimbabwean
leadership question.
So what should
President Mugabe do? The leader of the MDC, Morgan Tsvangirai, says
Mugabe should be dragged to the negotiating table by the likes of
presidents Thabo Mbeki and Olusegun Obasanjo and forced to talk
a political settlement with the MDC. But calling for inter-party
talks now is really flogging a dead horse not least because there's
really nothing to negotiate given the depth of "Mutually Assured
Demonisation" (Mad) between Zanu PF and the MDC. No wonder
Zanu PF and its government, gloating over reported divisions within
the MDC as if they cannot feel the heat from the ethnic fires that
are burning inside the ruling party, have been quick to dismiss
inter-party talks by reminding Tsvangirai that his party is in parliament
where a lot of talking is done.
On March 18
Trevor Ncube wrote an incisive analysis of the Zimbabwean predicament
ahead of the general election in this paper which disappointingly
concluded that President Mugabe was needed now as never before as
the solution to the crisis gripping the country and challenged him
to appoint able and dynamic deputies to succeed him.
Mugabe has publicly
demonstrated his leadership incapacity to make way for an able and
dynamic successor by succumbing to manipulative tribal pressure
from a clique in his party on November 18, 2004 at a politburo meeting
that unprocedurally and unconstitutionally amended Zanu PF's constitution
to guarantee the imposition and ascendancy of Joice Mujuru to the
vice-presidency three days before the Zanu PF membership was due
to elect a new top leadership and central committee.
Curiously, this
real coup whose tribal story has not yet been told took place on
the morning of the same day during which, later in the evening,
a coup plot was allegedly hatched at Dinyane High School in Tsholotsho
giving rise to the so-called Tsholotsho Declaration.
Inter-party
negotiations or appointment of able and dynamic potential successors
are no longer viable options for Mugabe not only because Zimbabwe
has now reached a point of no return to Zanu PF but also because
the required critical solution must focus not just on Mugabe but
also, and more importantly, on Zanu PF itself where there is internal
dictatorship, institutionalised patronage and refusal to reform.
This leaves
Mugabe with one real option that he must now exercise: to resign
in terms of the constitution of the land and to allow Zimbabweans
to choose a constitutional successor now. The nation is bleeding
and it would be very irresponsible to expect Zimbabweans to wait
until 2008 for the presidential election.
The Zanu PF
proposal that the next presidential election should be held in 2010
together with parliamentary elections due then is pure political
madness gone too far all because of the politics of patronage and
must be rejected with all democratic and legal force possible.
Apart from the
obvious yet very important fact that a voluntary constitutional
resignation to make room for a constitutional successor now would
indelibly guarantee him an honourable legacy and avoid the risk
of looming instability in our country, the following are among compelling
reasons why Mugabe must follow the constitutional exit door by resigning
now.
First, Mugabe
is now leader of a shelf political party that exists only in name
even with those seemingly high numbers in parliament because, in
real terms, the hearts and minds of the bulk of its members have
ideologically emigrated to a new all-inclusive third way beyond
current party boundaries, the so-called third force which in fact
is a people's movement, such that Zanu PF membership is now only
for strategic survival purposes in practical and not ideological
terms which are temporary.
Mugabe could
of course reverse this were he to resign now and give the remaining
scattered faithful ones in his party some hope to inject a new dynamism
before time completely runs out with the result of consigning Zanu
PF to the fate suffered by Unip in Zambia, Kanu in Kenya and the
MCP in Malawi.
The rot in Zanu
PF smells in government where the Cabinet has become no better than
a status club in which ministerial positions have no strategic policy
value as they have become instruments of patronage to gain personal
access to national resources and the illusion of power and influence.
This explains why
government has now resorted to ruling through "GBO"
(Government By
Operations) led by jittery security arms, implemented an undeclared
state of emergency and roped in the Reserve Bank to pursue an unprecedented
law and order approach to monetary policy in order to criminalise
Zimbabweans, whether as individuals, families or businesses, to make
them insecure and vulnerable to inhuman and barbaric attacks in the
name of restoring order reminiscent of the Gukurahundi days.
This evil has been dramatised
by the destruction of houses and business properties that has affected
the whole nation and invited the possibility of international intervention
to the detriment of our sovereignty.
But the most compelling
reasons for Mugabe to resign now have to do with his own fallen standing
in and outside the country. The prevalence of unkind jokes about him
on text messages and the Internet say it all. Mugabe now lacks the
vision, stature and energy to effectively run the country, let alone
his party.
He is without
compassion, maybe because he is now too old, too tired and not in
the best of health. His failure to visit stranded families left
homeless and suffering from the irrational acts of his own government
speaks volumes of his cold and cruel leadership style.
From all discernable
indications, Mugabe has lost influence and is now viewed with suspicion
or cynicism or both by his peers in the Sadc, African Union and
across the developing world where he used to enjoy considerable
authority. Of course, Mugabe is still respected as an old man and
he still makes very interesting bombastic speeches that are applauded
for their entertainment value and which are full of sound and fury
but signifying precious little at the level of policy and action.
Given the foregoing,
President Mugabe has no reason whatsoever to continue in office
as that is no longer in his personal interest and is most certainly
not in the national interest. He just must now go and the fundamental
law of the land gives him a decent constitutional exit that he must
take while he is still able to do so to save the nation and preserve
his legacy.
*Prof
Moyo is MP for Tsholotsho and former Information minister.
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