|
Back to Index
It
has to be the Zimbabwe we, not Mugabe, want
Arthur Mutambara
December 03, 2006
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=5390&siteid=1
ON 28 November
2006 the MDC leadership met with the Church leaders who are behind
The
Zimbabwe We Want initiative. This was the first time that our
party was engaged in this project. There had been misrepresentations
in the Press that the Church bishops had met some of our leaders
before the launch of the document. This was completely false.
Zimbabwe is
going through an economic and political crisis of unprecedented
proportions. Any initiative that seeks to foster and develop solutions
to this crisis must be supported. Whenever any group of Zimbabweans
gets together in pursuit of such initiatives, it must be hailed
and encouraged. The state of our country and the pain of our people
demand nothing less. Consequently, in spite of its initial exclusion
from this particular Church initiative, the MDC is solidly supportive
and wishes to be actively involved.
In pursuing
a national initiative such as the National Vision for Zimbabwe it
is essential to ensure ownership and buy-in by the generality of
the people of Zimbabwe. The people must own both the process and
content of the national vision. Furthermore, the process of an initiative
cannot be de-linked from its content. A dysfunctional process will
lead to distorted and contested content.
It is our submission
that the Church leaders’ process in crafting a National Vision for
Zimbabwe has been fundamentally flawed. It has been characterised
by dishonesty, manipulation, and lack of inclusiveness. A few examples
will suffice to illustrate these aspects. Critical stakeholders
in the form of civic organisations, political parties, and church
organisations (e.g., NCA,
Crisis
Coalition, MDC, ZCTU,
ZINASU,
Christian Alliance, and National Pastors’ Conference) were not engaged
nor consulted prior to the launch. To compound matters, there were
falsehoods in the media, which were never retracted, about some
of these groups being consulted. The lack of involvement of key
players led to the spectacular failure of the document launch, where
it ended being a Zanu PF orgy in self indulgence.
In addition,
some of those organisations engaged were shown versions of the document
that were different from what was eventually launched. This has
led to complaints about duplicity and manipulation from the Catholic
Jesuits and Archbishop Pius Ncube. The perception is that people
and organisations were being used to legitimise a dubious agenda.
The most problematic
process aspect of the Church initiative has been the way they have
engaged Robert Mugabe and Zanu PF. From the tea sessions at State
House to the launch of the document by Mugabe, the Church leaders
have allowed the criminal dictatorship of Mugabe to destroy the
potential of the initiative.
Mugabe’s ill-advised
comments about non-negotiable issues, defence of the Lancaster House
Constitution, and general disdain for other stakeholders, have compromised
the effectiveness of the initiative. In a very cynical way, Mugabe
embraced the project in order to destroy its credibility, and then
unleashed his chief apologists and propagandists to viciously attack
the initiative in the State media. What a shameful ploy!
The Church leaders
are well-intentioned and their motivation is honourable. However,
they have been extremely naïve. With the continuously deteriorating
economic malaise and global isolation, Mugabe wants to buy time.
He could use the initiative to do just that by appearing to be doing
something. The suffering people of Zimbabwe will reject any process
that will provide a lifeline to Mugabe’s evil regime. They will
not be part of any efforts to sanitize the dictator.
The general
gist of the document is in sync with the views of most Zimbabweans,
that is, the material is common cause. However, there are areas
characterised by omissions and distortions. Some of the distortions
are due to the dysfunctional process through which the initiative
has gone. The ugly hand of Zanu PF is evident. As already submitted,
you cannot separate content from process.
For a
start, the vision statement sounds like apple pie and motherhood.
There is no economic vision, neither is there a social justice aspect
to it. There is no clarity on the economic strategy that will take
Zimbabwe from the economic crisis to the Promised Land. The recommendations
on the economy are weak, poorly structured and lack congruency.
Similarly, the section on land requires more input around collateral
value of land, security of tenure, agricultural productivity, secondary
agriculture, justice and equity.
A major distortion
in the document is around the nature and cause of the Zimbabwean
crisis. At the root of our national problems are issues of bad governance,
political legitimacy, economic mismanagement, corruption, and political
dictatorship, all due to the absolute failure of Mugabe and Zanu
PF. This must be stated without equivocation or ambiguity. The vision
document at best equivocates, at worst it is apologetic. Misdiagnosis
of a problem will lead to wrong solutions.
It is
also astounding that the language of the document is very subdued
and apologetic when describing national institutional ills such
as POSA
and AIPPA.
In some cases the diction resembles that of Zanu PF in the way issues
like patriotism and sanctions are discussed. Presumably these language
overtures are meant to placate the dictator. It must be emphasised
that this is done at a huge cost: De-legitimisation of the content
leading to its total rejection by the people of Zimbabwe.
Another area
of contention in the document is on the subject of Gukurahundi,
which is treated shamelessly as a footnote. There is a celebration
of the first 15 years of independence as blissful and full of hope.
Yet, it is during this period that the regime of Mugabe massacred
over 20 000 civilians in Matabeleland and the Midlands. The nation
must come to terms with this reality. There must be a Truth and
Justice Commission, followed by an acknowledgement of what transpired.
Only then can
national healing begin. We must seek restorative justice, victim-based
justice, and rehabilitation of the communities affected. Today there
are young people who cannot get birth certificates and identification
cards because both parents were killed during Gukurahundi; and it
is not officially acknowledged that the parents are dead. These
are people being victimised today. Hence no! Gukurahundi cannot
be a footnote in a National Vision for Zimbabwe.
A general point
about the document is that it lacks time-frames, and prioritisation
of the different initiatives and recommendations. There must be
clarity on what matters are short-term, medium-term and long-term.
The document
extensively uses Christian Biblical chapters and verses. This is
inappropriate in a national vision document. Even if our country
is 90% Christian we still have Moslems, Hindus, and Jews as part
of our nation. There are also Zimbabweans who believe in traditional
religions. We need religious tolerance in our national vision.
As indicated
earlier, our detailed written response on the content is forthcoming.
In conclusion
it is clear that the Church leaders have process and content challenges
in their great initiative. It is important that they embrace the
critique we have provided above and address relevant matters.
The National
Vision must be owned by all Zimbabweans.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|