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Not
a united opposition, but managing the army is the Zimbabwean challenge
Itai Zimunya
August
22, 2006
As the Zimbabwean crisis continues to deepen and widen as displayed
by the acute shortages of food, local and foreign currency, fuel
and jobs, calls for the resolution of the political crisis seem
to be growing. The most particular call of recent days is that opposition
political parties ought to unite and form a strong front that can
successfully challenge Zanu PF from power. However, after assessing
the current balance of power in Zimbabwe, we content that it is
not a united opposition that is the missing link in Zimbabwe. Whilst
it has merit, it is not the touchstone. Some celebrated political
thinkers, including Masipula Sithole, Alfred Stepan and Jonathan
Moyo prescribe that the opposition need to engage a section of democrats
in Zanu PF and move towards a process of sustainable democratic
transformation. The big question, however, is how, when and by whom
shall this materialise.
To adequately
answer the above questions, it is important to analyse the balance
of power in Zimbabwe, from which we will derive the political formula.
A close look at the outcomes of the 2000, 2002 and 2005 general
and presidential elections reveal that Zanu PF does not have an
active majority of people in Zimbabwe. The opposition, despite its
activists being targets of political violence, has matched Zanu
PF in every district. In fact, various electoral reports to the
2000 and 2002 national elections state that, had it not been the
use of violence and manipulation, Zanu PF would have 'lost power'.
One eminent political
scholar, Brian Raftopoulos argues that there are two political personalities
that shape Zimbabwe’s polity, Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai.
Like John Makumbe predicted, Morgan Tsvangirai is leading in the
"numbers game" but seems to have failed to capitalise
on this popularity to affect the political environment in Zimbabwe.
Various factors contribute to this failure. These include the mere
presence of a counter power, Mugabe and the threat of the manipulated
state killing machinery.
This scale of
demographic support to the MDC and Zanu PF dismisses one aspect
for calling for a united opposition because the problem in Zimbabwe
is not a numerical minority of the opposition supporters. Masipula
Sithole and Jonathan Moyo agree that the power lies in the elite
coercive apparatus, the military, and this coercive apparatus is
controlled by the ruling Zanu PF elite. The challenge therefore
is how to unlock this coercive power, the military without a war.
Stepan suggests
that the opposition needs to focus more on increasing the process
of authoritarian erosion than focusing more on the total collapse
of the regime. In this thinking, he noted five groups in any authoritarian
regime in transition. These include:
- core supporters
of the regime,
- the coercive
apparatus i.e, the military, intelligence and the police,
- the regimes
active opponents i.e the opposition activists like the MDC,
ZAPU etc
- the regimes
passive supporters, i.e the business community and,
- the regimes
passive opponents such as the educated workers and academics
and sections of the church.
From the above
classification, it can be argued that the power in Zimbabwe lies
in a zone that is beyond electoral formations. That is why some
political commentators posit that the MDC won the 2002 presidential
election but Zanu PF retained power.
At present, the
majority of Zimbabweans seem to be fed up with the Zanu PF regime,
but for many reasons, they passively put up with the political rot.
It is important to highlight that at Tsholotsho, the media reported
that six Zanu PF provinces had agreed that Mugabe had to go. In
essence, these provinces agreed that there is a need for democratic
reform in Zimbabwe. The failure of the Tsholotsho declaration may
be that those resolutions had no support of the coercive force,
the military.
After the Tsholotsho
declaration, Jonathan Moyo pointed out that there was a bigger opposition
within Zanu PF. Therefore other opposition political parties, the
Movement for Democratic Change specifically, needed to engage a
section of democrats in Zanu PF to finally rest the Zimbabwean crisis.
Reactions to Jonathan Moyo’s proposition were negative. The proposal
was not dismissed because of its emptiness, but because of the anger
of his link to the promulgation of obnoxious pieces of legislation,
the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) and the
Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) during his stint as Minister of
Information in Mugabe's government.
In other words,
Jonathan Moyo is revealing that there are many people in Zanu PF
that have either degraded themselves or have been degraded from
active supporters of that party into passive supporters. It means,
if there were no fear of reproach, they would have left to join
the opposition. Masipula Sithole proposes solutions to this dilemma.
Writing the Public
Eye, in the Financial Gazette of 8 January 1998, Masipula Sithole
says, " members of the coercive elite are the major agents of
change". He further states that a combination of democrats from
both inside and outside Zanu PF may well be the source of a more
enduring democratisation process.
Therefore, it
is the duty of the opposition to prove that an alternative establishment
is a viable option. This will most likely diminish the Zanu PF fear
of change and enlist them as active opponents leaving the coercive
force a neutralised force.
Equally, it would
be naïve for any of the two Zanu PF factions, that of Mnangagwa
or Mujuru to think that they can go it alone in the post Mugabe
era. Zanu PF, in whatever form needs to realise and acknowledge
the presence and permanence of opposition politics in Zimbabwe.
Wishes of a super Zanu PF in government must be taken as mere dreams.
There could be a motivation for democrats in Zanu PF to realise
this and begin to make strategic contacts with the opposition.
In this case,
the two Zanu PF factions have two options, and time is fast running
out on them. They either have to mend relations or compete to make
collective deals with the opposition, especially the MDC. Option
number one is almost impossible because of the levels of mistrust
and economic attacks that have been made including the purge on
the financial sector and the post Tsholotsho sanctions on pro-Mnangagwa
actors.
The second option
is real but very risky, especially in the presence of Mugabe. Mugabe
has personally declared Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC as enemies
that "must be crushed". He means it and anyone that entertains the
MDC is a sell out that must receive the highest form of punishment.
This is why South African President Mbeki’s quiet diplomacy failed.
That is also noted as the main problem behind the stagnation in
political dialogue among political actors in Zimbabwe. The main
player of this option is therefore Robert Mugabe himself.
Assuming Mugabe
away, expectations of the army causing confusion are, in this case,
remote for several reasons. Chiefly, the army is viewed as part
of the succession jigsaw and there is no consensus at present among
the army generals of which Zanu PF faction to support. Secondly,
tribal politics form an integral part of the Zanu PF succession
debate and thus, because the army is not immune to tribalism, it
is affected. The third factor is that the army is loyal and not
naïve. They are loyal to Zimbabwe, and support a peaceful political
transformation, which they also highly expect given the current
economic downfall.
These facts confirm
perceptions that Mugabe is a stumbling block to Zimbabwe's political
transition, both within Zanu PF and at national level. It is this
perception (if not reality) that justifies the calls, both within
Zanu PF and in the opposition that Mugabe must go. He must rest
and pave way for intra-Zanu PF reform, which can not be disassociated
with national reform.
In realisation
of this Mugabe factor, Jonathan Moyo, despite being a political
gymnast, argues that the political leadership in the opposition
political parties must realise the existence of a big opposition
currently sitting in Zanu PF. It has to be strategically captured
and this reflects a greater chance for quicker and more stable political
reforms. Should these talks fail, though it is remote, there could
be a super intra Zanu PF agreement for power sharing among the warring
Mujuru and Mnangagwa factions.
An intra-Zanu
PF power-sharing agreement is the last thing that Zimbabwe expects
because it could mean suffer continues to the masses and looting-continue
to the political sultans.
An all-out MDC
government is possible more as a theory than in reality in the short
term, though it is possible in the medium term. Whilst the opposition
has the active support of the masses more than Zanu PF, it is the
military aspect that is the stumbling block. It is the key that
one faction of Zanu PF presents. This presentation brings with it
avenues for the making of a new democratic constitution leading
to free and fair elections.
This is the fourth
way. It presupposes the existence of three other possible avenues
of political development in Zimbabwe. These include:
- maintenance
of the status quo,
- total power
to the opposition without Zanu PF, and
- domination
of Zanu PF with a subdued opposition in parliament, the senate
and city councils.
Analyses of these
possible options reveal that hopes of an all Zanu PF or an all MDC
government is a mirage. Such a scenario does not cherish multi-partism
and is constructed around a one-party-state manifesto base. A political
system that has made Zimbabwe wilt under Mugabe, the Alpha and Omega
of Zanu PF. Option three represents cosmetic democracy where a dictator
displays and celebrates the holding of elections according to the
constitutional calendars and celebrates minority and insignificant
opposition representation in parliament, in the senate and in local
government authorities as a sign of peoples will.
The fourth way
is inevitable and history is with Zimbabwe. In reference to Africa
and Zimbabwe in particular, socio-political transition can not be
done in a mathematical formula of total elimination of the status
quo. That is why in 1980, the patriotic front had to join hands
with the former oppressors and enter into a new phase of politics.
South Africa is another model of the fourth way, where in 1994,
the emerging revolutionary power engaged a section of the oppressive
machinery to facilitate reforms. This is possible in Zimbabwe, despite
the existence of extreme resentment both among the cadres of the
opposition and those that are benefiting from free government funds.
It has to be noted
however, that such a move must not be used to crush other political
opinions. Opposition politics, in the case of Zimbabwe must be encouraged
to provide the balance of power. For a meaningful implementation
of this proposal, issues of transitional justice must be visited,
where victims of socio-economic and political violence are compensated
and perpetrators brought to book.
This proposition
is believed to be the reverse of what South African President had
prescribed for Zimbabwe. It is believed that during the 2003 MDC-Zanu
PF dialogue, it was Mbeki’s plan to sideline Morgan Tsvangirai,
seen as a hard-liner, and bring a section of the MDC into a coalition
government with Zanu PF. This, as it did, was doomed to fail for
several reasons. The reasons include the exclusion of ordinary Zimbabweans
from participating in the transitional process and the reluctance
of the domineering Zanu PF from using force as a tool of governance.
So the people remained suspicious, and I think will remain suspicious
of any formation that is dominated by Zanu PF because to them Zanu
PF represents hunger, oppression, torture and violence.
The best way forward
for Zimbabwe demands a careful cost-benefit analysis of any such
political moves. Political dialogue is inevitable. Just like there
is a cease-fire in any struggle, it might be time for such in Zimbabwe.
Time and accuracy are important, as any delay might be dangerous
to both the ruling elite and the opposition. As the world allies
and the political horses begin to get tired, it exposes and weakens
many political movements. For the opposition, a long struggle has
the danger of creating an opposition within an opposition as the
foot-soldiers begin to get tired and disillusioned, then turning
against their own masters and losing discipline.
The other present
initiative of making a national vision document by the Church complement
the calls for a new democratic constitution in addition to setting
value based standards for a future Zimbabwe. Mass action is best
as a threat in Zimbabwe, and mostly as spasmodic and sporadic comical
displays of the dictator’s weakness than as a popular front for
regime change. Sporadic action presents a counter military headache
than a formalised revolution that can be crashed using conventional
defence operations. The final push of June 2003 must serve as a
lesson.
In conclusion,
and from a nationalist perspective, it may be time Zimbabweans recognise
and appreciate their political differences and begin to work towards
people-inclusive dialogue. Every day is a painful day for Zimbabweans
despite Gono's Operation Sunrise and his sugar promise of a better
Zimbabwe buoyed by bearer cheques. Die hards like Robert Mugabe,
that have master minded Zimbabwe’s downfall over the last 26 years
must be assisted to go by both opposition sections within and without
Zanu PF, the international community and by the church. Lastly,
any mediated settlement on the Zimbabwean crisis must address the
constitutional vacuum created by the amended Lancaster House constitution
that Zanu PF claims to be Zimbabwean. Any failure to visit the constitutional
question means the struggles continue for Zimbabweans. And it shall
continue for it is our birthright.
*Itai Zimunya,
a former student leader and human rights defender.
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