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This article participates on the following special index pages:
The Zimbabwe We Want: "Towards a National Vision for Zimbabwe" - Index of articles
Church
leaders miss the point
Pedzisai
Ruhanya
November 03, 2006
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=8294
ATTEMPTS by
some sections of the church led by Zanu PF religious sympathisers
to legitimise the norm-violating regime of President Robert Mugabe
by crafting what they view as the solution to the crisis in Zimbabwe
through their so-called National
Vision document should be interrogated, demystified and rejected
on the basis of its failure to locate causes of the country’s national
decay.
While some leaders
of the church have a right to rehabilitate the decadent Zanu PF
regime that has authored the national crisis, they should not mislead
the country into believing that their sectional interests reflect
the national mood.
Firstly, the
misguided church leaders and Zanu PF praise-singers miss the point
by failing to understand that the country has numerous people with
vision bar the Zanu PF leadership. It is therefore clear that the
country has visionary leaders and what is needed is a constitutional
and institutional framework to implement the abundant vision Zimbabweans
are blessed with.
There is therefore
an urgent need for a constitutional overhaul in the country in order
to create a Zimbabwe that everyone can be proud of. A constitutional
framework is necessary to implement that vision because a regime
whose powers are not restrained is a danger not only to the country
but even to itself.
This is so because
governmental power which is essential to the realisation of national
values including the so-called vision that the Zanu PF-associated
church leaders are calling for should be controlled in order that
it should not be destructive to the national values that any civilised
and democratic government is established to promote.
There is no
governmental restraint in Zimbabwe and most critical institutions
in the country are appendages of the executive. This is what Zimbabweans
should concern themselves with in constitutional reforms.
The principle
of constitutionalism rests on the idea of restraining government
in its exercise of power. The abuse of human rights in Zimbabwe
is a result of an unrestrained government.
After Independence,
the Zanu PF government killed thousands of innocent Zimbabweans
in the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces because Mugabe’s regime
was answerable to itself and not even to the Zanu PF controlled
parliament. More recently, especially after 2000, many Zimbabweans
have died through state-sponsored violence while some of the culprits
such as the Central Intelligence Organisation operative Joseph Mwale
still remain free because of executive protection.
Zimbabwe needs
a total overhaul of its governance structure through constitutional
reform, not the so-called National Vision document that the church
leaders linked to Zanu PF are talking about. Contrary to what the
church leaders that visited Mugabe are saying, it is critical that
there be regime change in Zimbabwe because without a fundamental
change in the institutional and governance structure of the country,
the national crisis will continue.
The church leaders
need to appreciate that when people talk of regime change, they
are not necessarily saying the government or President Mugabe should
be overthrown. This is a parochial definition of regime change that
is associated with bootlickers of the regime. A regime is a set
of rules, norms and values by which a society or government is organised.
When Zimbabweans
say they need regime change, they are talking about governance changes
which include constitutional reforms. The regime that we need to
change in Zimbabwe is a regime that celebrates and values murder,
violence, rape, militarisation of state institutions such as the
Grain Marketing Board, electoral manipulation and other vices.
If the leader
of the country and his government celebrate or entrench such vices,
then they will be part of the regime change. Surely any Zimbabwean
who argues that the country should not change a violent regime that
encompasses murder in its governance structures needs urgent medical
attention.
If the church
leaders want to convince Zimbabweans that regime change is wrong,
then there is a need to question their religious intentions in this
matter. They need to appreciate that regime change goes beyond the
mere removal of a leader and the government, it goes to the heart
of governance. This means a leader of the government such as Mugabe
can effect regime change although it is impossible in Zimbabwe.
Mugabe can do
so by working with others in the country to overhaul the institutional
and governance regime in the country through the establishment of
a democratic state via constitutional reforms and sea changes in
the political culture of Zimbabweans where people desist from creating
political enemies among each other and where political diversity
is celebrated in the country and not denouncing others on phantom
allegations of selling-out the country as a cover up for political
failure.
These church
leaders’ aim is to make the people of Zimbabwe accept that the Zanu
PF government is the legitimate authority in Zimbabwe. It could
be lawful or legal but definitely not legitimate.
It has been
argued in political science discourse that power can be said to
be legitimate to the extent that it conforms to established rule,
the rules can be justified by reference to beliefs shared by both
the dominant and subordinate, and there is evidence of consent by
the subordinate to the particular power relation. Those who argue
that the Zanu PF government is a legitimate regime must satisfy
these criteria. In my view the current political situation since
2000 indicates that the Harare regime is not legitimate.
The first and
most basic level of legitimacy is that of rules. It is argued that
power can be said to be legitimate in the first instance if it is
acquired and exercised in accordance with established rules. These
rules may be unwritten, as informal conventions, or they may be
formalised in legal codes or judgements. In the case of Zimbabwe,
during election times, rules are broken with impunity, judges are
harassed, lawyers are beaten up while journalists are banned and
newspapers bombed. A government that is born out of such a process
cannot be called a legitimate regime. These are the issues that
the church leaders need to make Mugabe appreciate in order to gain
legitimacy both at home and abroad.
It is therefore
plausible to argue that on its own, legal validity is insufficient
to secure legitimacy, since the rules through which power is acquired
and exercised stand in need of justification. Power is therefore
legitimate to the extent that the rules of power can be justified
in terms of beliefs shared by both dominant and subordinate, the
governors and the governors. In Zimbabwe, there is dispute over
how Zanu PF acquired its power and therefore the regime cannot be
said to be legitimtate
For power to
be fully legitimate, then, three conditions are required: its conformity
to established rules; the justifiability of rules by reference to
shared beliefs; the express consent of the subordinate or of the
most significant among them, to the particular relations of power.
In the case
of Zimbabwe, the leader derives power through violence, fear and
other vices hence my contention that the Zanu PF government is illegitimate
because it fails to meet the criterion of a legitimate government.
A government that disenfranchises its citizens living abroad, that
harasses judges, bans newspapers and forces its citizens to vote
for it cannot be called a legitimate government.
The church leaders
need to deal with this illegitimacy by encouraging Mugabe to return
the country to democratic legitimacy before they talk about their
national vision document.
* Pedzisai
Ruhanya is a human rights researcher.
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