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Quo
vadis Zimbabwe?
Trevor
Ncube
March 23, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=302796&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/
With horror, we have
looked at Zimbabwe and seen the whiplashes of a panicking regime.
But now what? Now what, after the welts are healing and the worst
of the blood has been staunched?
Examination will show
us that to chronicle this as the work of a desperate regime is inaccurate.
It is the deliberate strategy of President Robert Mugabe, whose
bid to extend his rule until 2010 has failed.
He therefore believes
violence might secure him extended political tenure.
As Zimbabweans who believe
in our country, we must begin to plot a way forward that is not
dependent on Mugabe, Zanu-PF or even the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC). The best way forward will be to begin assembling
the building blocks of a negotiated settlement that will result
in a new rights-based constitution.
Here-s why.
Mugabe has no intention
of stepping down any time soon, for a number of reasons. His own
explanation is that Zanu-PF is currently divided over the succession
issue and needs him to face the opposition. This is a crisis of
his own making for he has not put a succession plan in place or
created an environment in his own party that would allow for the
emergence of a new leader.
He also fears
prosecution for human rights abuses perpetrated against innocent
Zimbabweans since independence in 1980. These include the Matabeleland
massacres, the violent land invasions that saw hundreds of white
commercial farmers and opposition activists killed and the Murambatsvina
atrocity, which the United Nations report recommended should be
referred to The Hague. And he continues to add to these crimes with
the current round of violent attacks on opposition activists.
Playing on Mugabe-s
mind must be the arrest of former Liberian leader Charles Taylor
on war crimes charges, the prosecution of Slobodan Milosevic for
human rights abuses and the recent events in Iraq. Thus, the main
reason for staying in office is not because he has a vision of a
better Zimbabwe under his leadership, but because the office offers
him protection from prosecution for human rights abuses. For the
sake of progress, Zimbabweans may have to consider guaranteeing
him immunity under certain conditions.
Zimbabweans have already
suffered long enough and there is no price too high to pay for peace.
They will have to choose between continued violence and pardoning
Mugabe if he leaves office now. This demands political maturity
and the international community will have no alternative but to
take its cue from Zimbabweans. Should this immunity be extended
to all his close associates? This could be worth considering in
exchange for full disclosures of all documented human rights abuses.
It is important to realise
that unless this is done Mugabe is prepared to use violence against
all Zimbabweans calling for change to a more democratic dispensation.
Zimbabweans must pay the ransom so that they are freed from Mugabe-s
violent clutches. People desperately need a chance to live and dream
again and only Mugabe, and those whose fortunes are wedded to his,
stand in the way of this. Mugabe has nothing to lose and is prepared
to take the country down with him, but he must not be allowed to
succeed in this evil scheme.
With Mugabe gone, we
could contemplate the future and its challenges. As part of the
transition to a new Zimbabwe we will have to draw a line in the
sand and ensure that we don-t allow another Mugabe to emerge
from our midst. An all-party negotiated constitution on the South
African model, which is rights-based, would be a necessary foundation
stone for a new Zimbabwe.
It is instructive that
violence, as a political tool, has worked perfectly for Mugabe so
far. The current round of violence is partly intended to divert
attention away from calls within Zanu-PF for him to step down. Mugabe
has orchestrated the violence against the weak and divided MDC as
a way of focusing his divided party on an outside enemy. Mugabe
hopes that the factions in his party will buy this ruse, rally to
his call to eliminate an ineffectual opposition and help him purchase
a few more years in office. The violence is also intended to send
a clear message to those within his party who are opposed to him.
The message is that they too could come to suffer at the hands of
his band of hired thugs.
It appears that, for
the moment, the two factions opposed to Mugabe are not taken in
by his diversionary tactics. They have woken up to the fact that
he is using them to achieve his personal goals. They are realising
that there is no national purpose to be served by Mugabe-s
selfish political survival project. Indeed, his indication last
week that he wants to run in 2008 is another tactic meant to force
his enemies within Zanu-PF to fall in line and campaign for him
under the threat that if he loses, so will the party.
He is using the epoch
to cement the image of himself as synonymous with the ruling party
when power groupings had begun to imagine a Zanu-PF without him.
In this regard, calls by Tony Blair this week for more political
sanctions play into Mugabe-s hands and force his protagonists
in the party into an uncomfortable corner with him.
Two powerful factions
within the ruling party want Mugabe out of office. These factions
take credit for defeating Mugabe-s 2010 project. The more
powerful of the two is led by retired general Solomon Mujuru, whose
wife, Joyce, is one of Mugabe-s vice-presidents. A year ago,
this faction was on the ascendancy, but has clearly fallen out of
favour, as evidenced by Mugabe-s attack on the Mujurus-
ambitions.
The flavour of the moment
is the Emmerson Mnangagwa-led faction, which suffered a major reversal
of fortunes following the Tsolotsho incident in 2004. Now Mugabe,
as part of a divide and rule tactic, is making this faction believe
it is his preferred heir. It would be political folly for the Mnangagwa
camp to derive a false sense of comfort from Mugabe-s political
embrace. He will dump them as soon as they become a real threat
and once he is secure again. Make no mistake, politics in Zimbabwe
is about Mugabe and nothing else.
And Mugabe has his own
faction fighting for his survival, in the top echelons of the army,
the police and the intelligence services. It must be noted, however,
that there are deep divisions within the middle and lower ranks
of the uniformed forces which mirror the three factions in the party.
Two things are instructive
as Zimbabweans ponder the way forward. The first of these is that
the defeat of Mugabe-s 2010 project was delivered by forces
for change within Zanu-PF and had little to do with pressure from
the opposition or the international community. Secondly, the weakness
of the opposition MDC, unfortunate as it is, removed an outside
threat for Zanu-PF, focusing the party on internal dynamics and
causing deep divisions and the realisation that Mugabe is the problem.
This points to the fact that Zanu-PF-s internal dynamics might
be key in finding a way out of Zimbabwe-s crisis and that
the MDC might not be the place to look for relief. While this is
an unpopular view it is a pragmatic one, informed by the current
weakness of the MDC and the potential offered by reformers in the
ruling party.
Equally important is
the evidence that Zimbabwe-s problems are far bigger than
Zanu-PF and the MDC put together. We need to disabuse ourselves
of the notion that talks between the MDC and Zanu-PF will solve
Zimbabwe-s problems. A durable solution requires getting a
broad section of Zimbabweans talking to each other about their problems
and structuring the future together. This is clearly not a winner-takes-all
strategy, but a process of negotiating how Zimbabwe-s future
is going to be ordered. For this project to have wider purchase,
trade unions, the churches, business and all other civil society
players will have to be involved.
What Zimbabwe needs from
the region and the international community is an honest broker who
commands respect from all players. Zimbabweans have become so polarised
that it would be difficult to find anybody internally to play this
role. First, there must be an acknowledgement that we need to talk
to each other, followed by agreement on the issues to talk about.
We need to tear up the Lancaster House constitution and start afresh,
fashioning a progressive rights-based founding law.
We would then need to
agree on an electoral law and the rules of engagement and invite
the international community to help run a democratic election whose
outcome would form an important bedrock for the future. We would
need to put in place a process to rebuild key national institutions
such as Parliament, the army, the police force and intelligence.
Our people must realise
that they have the power to elect and that they have the power to
recall.
Our recent past tells
us that we have lost our humanity and respect for each other, and
we need to define who we are. Our national psyche has been poisoned
by Zanu-PF discourse and we need to cleanse it, and rebase our norms
and values. We need to confront the ghosts of our recent past and
decide how we deal with them in a fair and just manner so that they
don-t revisit us in the future. We are where we are largely
because we failed to deal with troubling issues relating to our
war of liberation which have all come back to haunt us.
Talk of peace, justice
and reconciliation will find few takers among the hardliners in
the opposition and the ruling party. But we should refuse to have
extremists on both sides dictating a narrow political agenda to
the nation. Zimbabweans have been brutalised and dehumanised, and
need political maturity, not grandstanding from their leaders. Indeed,
Zimbabweans desperately need a visionary leadership.
This all-inclusive political
approach takes cognisance of the fact that while the MDC has played
a significant role in confronting Mugabe-s dictatorial regime,
it is far from ready to govern. On the other hand, while Zanu-PF
is largely responsible for our current predicament, there are some
good people in the ruling party who are prepared to play a role
in fashioning a new Zimbabwe. However, apart from simply wanting
to dislodge Mugabe and grab power, none of the Zanu-PF factions
has shown it has a plan for the country and that it can be trusted
to govern on its own. Thus a new Zimbabwe will have to be the outcome
of a collective and consultative national effort.
Brutus in Julius Caesar
offers us a way forward: "There is a tide in the affairs of
men, which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all
the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On
such a full sea are we now afloat. And we must take the current
when it serves or lose our ventures."
Indeed, we face a choice
between violent and peaceful change and we need to make the right
choice for the future of our country.
*Trevor
Ncube is chief executive and publisher of M&G Media and publisher
and executive chairperson of the Zimbabwe Independent and the Standard
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