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The
pitfalls of opposition politics in Zimbabwe: On why (MDC) is struggling
Dr
Alex T Magaisa
July 28, 2005
The great challenges
that the MDC is facing should not be a source of surprise. These are challenges
that at one point or another were bound to materialise – the only question
was when that would happen.
First, that the MDC
was a coalition of otherwise disparate groups was known from the very
beginning. It was, to put it mildly a choir of discordant voices. It didn’t
sound right, but those who listened chose to pay attention to the sales,
rather than the quality of its production. It was always a shaky alliance
– of previously opposing groups, which were united by one aim: the removal
of Mugabe and his government and the introduction a new dispensation led
by a new government, whatever it was. No one really cared about the quality
of the change. It was change for change’s sake. Disparate groups, lack
of leadership scrutiny, amateurism, greed, unbridled ambition, riding
on a wave of protest rather than support – a dangerous concoction it was.
The result justified
the means. An alliance of farmers, farm workers, businesses, trade unions,
the urban and the rural, middle class (or aspiring) and the working classes
was bound to be shaky at the very least. It was an alliance based on the
prospect of imminent success. Failure was not an option or was deliberately
dismissed as an impossibility. The failure to respond to apparently unfair
electoral defeats demonstrated that the MDC had based its strategy on
the basis of the belief that it would win elections. The possibility of
loss, by means fair or foul, had not been accounted for and when it materialised
the MDC has always been caught napping. After three elections, some have
begun to say, fatigue has set in. It is not simply fatigue – it is careless,
amateurish planning and unrestrained lust for power – the over-eagerness
of a young man who meets a woman for the first time, and in his bid to
impress fails the basics and flounders.
Secondly, the MDC
became misdirected in its strategy and approach to the issues facing the
country. It found itself between two constituencies – on the one hand,
the people of Zimbabwe and secondly the international community. Unfortunately,
it became a "captured" movement – responding more to the demands
and concerns of the international community and less to the daily concerns
of the local people. It became distant and its leaders were more interested
in flying to Western capitals than they were prepared to rally the masses
in the townships and the rural areas – except during the pre-election
phases during which conditions were manipulated to cause maximum difficulty
for the MDC. In the end the MDC was not quite visible beyond the urban
areas.
Yet Mugabe plotted
well and repeatedly dismissed the MDC as an instrument for Western imperialism.
We all thought it was nonsense of course but the idea was repeated so
often in the state-controlled media, and true to Goebbels’ tactics, some
people began to believe that it was true. What did the MDC do to avert
that impression of being a stooge for the West? Nothing, besides shallow
media denials that it was not. Worse, perhaps drawing comfort from the
support it received as a pro-democracy movement the MDC publicly displayed
its friendship with the Western powers. Unsurprisingly, in its folly the
leadership ended up eating from the same plate with the "consultant",
the notorious Ari Ben Menashe, who turned out to be Mugabe’s spy. People
tended to forgive the leadership, but this showed the ineptitude and weaknesses
in the leadership especially the misguided affinity for all things Western.
So like a rabbit glaring
at the headlights, the MDC stood there in awe, hoping that the solution
would come from outside and that in the scheme of things, the people of
Zimbabwe were powerless and had no role to play beyond participation in
a clearly manipulated electoral process. There was a saying in my youthful
days, which was told in Shona as "Kudyiwa wakatarisa seMatemba"
– Matemba are small fish. When captured and cooked their eyes appear
to be glaring at the consumer. They can "see" that they are
being eaten, people say, but they do not resist. It connotes a foolish
person, who knows he is getting into trouble but does nothing to avert
the outcome. The MDC knew, or should have known that they were losing
in the elections due to the unfair system, but they went along nonetheless
and had no alternative strategy. Yakadyiwa yakatarisa seMatemba.
The biggest problem
however is that the MDC seems to have lost focus on the primary reasons
for its emergence in 1999 and the key points of challenge against ZANU
PF that really matter to the people. This is connected to the above point
in relation to "capture" by the international community. Instead
of focussing on the wider primary reasons for people’s disgruntlement
against ZANU PF, the MDC became obsessed with the matter of "human
rights". Everything became human rights; Everyone was talking of
human rights; "Mugabe must go because he violates human rights",
etc. I do not discount that there have been human rights abuses in the
country. However, what causes concern is the Reductionist approach to
the Zimbabwean problem whereby everything is reduced to the human rights
argument and must fit the human rights paradigm. Therefore every problem,
every other issue which many of the groups that make up the MDC had against
the government became quite simply a "human rights" issue. The
key challenges against the government, such as economic mismanagement
(which by the way was the primary problem long before the current human
rights problems) have become marginalised topics that are discussed on
a "by the way" basis.
It is easy to see
why the MDC became so obsessed with human rights that it began to base
its campaign against Mugabe on the basis of violation of human rights.
It could not ably articulate the many issues represented by the many voices
in the MDC choir. The leadership probably listened to the tune and realised
that there was too much discord. Their advisers, the "consultants"
probably heard the discord too and advised them to stick to one issue
as the rallying point against Mugabe: Human Rights – for that is universal
and affects everyone. It universalises the problem and covers all issues
under a single umbrella. But it also meant lost opportunities to challenge
Mugabe on key areas that directly affect people on the ground – education,
health, transport, employment, development, etc. Even Mugabe knew this
– when he was donating computers to rural schools across the country,
what did the MDC do to address the weaknesses of ZANU regarding the education
policies and practices? Nothing on that issue which is dear to people’s
hearts. The restoration of human rights will not necessarily change the
way public exams are run in Zimbabwe – the MDC needs to articulate these
issues that find resonance in the community. Instead, all we hear is Mugabe
violates human rights and nothing more.
But on a more crucial
note, how well does this "human rights" talk resonate with the
local population? This is a population of which more than half of the
people probably did not have a clue about the Constitution, let alone
the Bill of Rights before the constitutional debate in 1999. There is
no doubt that human rights matter to everyone, the knowledgeable and the
ignorant alike. But as a political strategy, it is necessary to put at
the forefront, issues that are uppermost in the psyche of the people.
A campaign predicated on human rights sounds very right and sweet to the
international community, especially Western countries. The introduction
of democracy and promotion of human rights and removal of tyrannies is
well in line with the current US foreign policy.
What the MDC has done
and its campaign strategy based primarily on the need to remove Mugabe
because he allegedly violates human rights and is undemocratic elicits
support and sympathy from large sections of the international community,
especially the West. But does it really touch the key areas of the local
population? Do Zimbabwean people primarily dislike Mugabe and his government
because of human rights violations or because of economic mismanagement?
In other words, do people want the government replaced because it closed
the Daily News or because it is not delivering bread? Okay, it could be
said more generally that both reasons apply, but surely there is something
that is uppermost in the mind of the people and foremost in their hearts
and I argue that in this case it is bread. And you do not need to argue
this point on the basis of human rights to make it a relevant issue. The
MDC has chosen to discuss almost everything in the language of human rights.
It is good for the international community to understand our problem but
it is also necessary to base the campaign on issues that resonate in the
local context. This, I fear, the MDC has not done very well – the leaders
are more often in London and Brussels or addressing the BBC and CNN than
they are in Dotito or Esigodini.
Unless the MDC, refocuses
its energy on the local, it will continue to look to the international
community – which frankly has more interests elsewhere and will continue
to shout against Mugabe, but ultimately do nothing, but all the while,
their businesses are still doing business in Zimbabwe.
* Dr Magaisa is
a Zimbabwean lawyer and formerly Lecturer in law at the University of
Nottingham, UK. He is a weekly columnist for the Zimbabwe Independent
newspaper and can be contacted at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
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