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Mbeki's
Zimbabwe challenge
Brian
Raftopoulos
June 08, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200706080731.html
THE mediation on Zimbabwe,
led by South African President Thabo Mbeki, presents the Southern
African Development Community (Sadc) with a narrow window of opportunity
to avoid even further deterioration in Zimbabwe's political and
economic fortunes.
The initiative, brought
about by a combination of growing regional embarrassment over President
Robert Mugabe's authoritarian violence and international pressure
on the regional organisation, is faced with enormous obstacles in
the form of the persistent recalcitrance of decisive elements of
the Mugabe regime.
Nevertheless, the mediation
does present an opportunity to pry open new political spaces in
the country.
March 11 2007 and the
months that followed provided new evidence of Zanu PF's growing
reliance on violence as a form of rule. The public beating of opposition
and civic leaders, rank and file Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) members and high-profile lawyers in the country signalled
an escalation of repression against the political and civic opposition
in the country.
Faced with a deepening
economic crisis, a bitter battle over succession within the ruling
party, the persistent presence of opposition forces and continued
international pressure, Zanu PF responded to the growing pressures
with characteristic contempt.
The demand by Sadc at
the end of March that Mugabe enter into a Sadc-led mediation with
the opposition is a process that the Zimbabwean leader is thus obliged
to engage in if he is to maintain the integrity and support of the
region. Developing regional solidarity has been a key element of
Mugabe's survival strategy, and therefore his contempt for the opposition
can no longer keep him out of such a dialogue.
However, it is certain
that Mugabe will make the process as difficult as possible for his
South African counterpart.
Already in the period
since March 11 we have witnessed the continued arrests, violence,
torture and killing of MDC activists on allegations of terrorism.
This attempt to deploy the discourse of "terror" against
the opposition is an addition to the rhetoric of exclusion that
already has pride of place in Zanu PF's nationalist vision. The
calumny and language of disdain used against arrested MDC activists
provides additional evidence that building a language of tolerance
and inclusion in a post-Mugabe era will be a major challenge.
Equally significant is
the fact that the recent violence is Mugabe's introductory gambit
into the mediation process. Even as Mbeki has tried to provide a
conciliatory space for both sides on the political divide, Zimbabwe's
ruling party has sought to exacerbate the differences.
In addition we can expect
Mugabe to engage in a series of delaying tactics, such as calls
for the postponement of the talks, and the setting of unacceptable
preconditions. Mugabe is likely to drag out the mediation for as
long as possible, even as he prepares for another problematic election
in
2008.
The Zimbabwean government
has already announced that a general election will take place at
the end of March, and the current general assault on the opposition
indicates Mugabe's election campaign is already underway.
Thus it appears that
Mugabe is once again setting the time-frame and agenda of the mediation
process. Given the pressure on the mediator to move the process
along as quickly as possible, the central emphasis of the mediation
will be on providing the minimum conditions for a "reasonable
and acceptable" election to take place in 2008.
Both Mbeki and Mugabe
understand that the opposition forces in Zimbabwe have been seriously
weakened by a combination of state repression, the split within
the MDC and a lack of support within the region.
The MDC is thus unable
to provide strong internal pressure as a bargaining strategy in
the talks. This places the organisation in an invidious situation,
in which its major points of pressure are a reluctant Sadc mediation,
pressure from the West and the possibility of a resurgent opposition
in the future. The balance of forces in the current context thus
weighs heavily against them.
For Mugabe the two major
pressures that confront him are the rapidly declining economy and
the factional battles in his party. The indicators of decline in
Zimbabwe have become a standard global reference for economic failure.
The inflation rate stands
at over 3 700%, while by 2006 GDP per capita was 47% below the level
in 1980. At the end of 2006 the average minimum wage of Zimbabwean
workers was only 16,6% of the poverty datum line calculated at December
2006 levels, while the formal sector decreased from 1,4 million
in 1998 to 998 000 in 2004.
When these indicators
are combined with anticipated shortages of food this year and the
continued loss of high level skills from the country, the picture
looks increasingly bleak.
An important part of
the factional struggle within the ruling party is about the strategy
for "normalisation" that will lead to a new engagement
with the international community, and allow the party elite the
time and space to consolidate their fast-acquired wealth. It is
the terms of this re-engagement that will form the core of the mediation
talks, while the future of Mugabe himself will be a major feature
of this normalisation.
On this matter, given
the intense battles within Zanu PF, Mugabe does not feel that he
can hand over the torch to anyone else. It is for this reason that
the ruling party structures were manipulated to ensure Mugabe's
presidential candidacy for 2008.
For Zanu PF the mediation
will thus be about making as few reforms as possible to get acceptance
for an election next year, knowing the current state of the opposition.
On the other hand the
opposition must face the pressures of growing national and international
intolerance of their divisions, and the thought that a failure of
the mediation process will present major strategic and organisational
dilemmas for the future. They are much more dependent on this mediation
to open up new political spaces in the country, in the hope that
these will provide new opportunities for strengthening their position.
This is not the best
position for the Zimbabwean opposition to be in, but it is the reality
that has to be confronted and negotiated. More broadly, it is the
dilemma of post-liberation opposition movements that must confront
the anti-colonial discourse of authoritarian nationalist governments
with a political language that negotiates the tensions between democratic
political questions and the pressures of redistributive economic
demands.
It may be that in the
current regional and global context, diminished economic alternatives
will continue to provide the conditions for generating renewed authoritarian
nationalisms. However the challenge of developing an alternative,
and more tolerant, language of national belonging remains an urgent
task.
* Brian Raftopoulos is
head of the Transitional Justice in Africa Programme, Institute
for Justice and Reconciliation, Cape Town.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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