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Poll
about dignity, power, water
Bill Saidi
October 28, 2007
SOON citizens with prickly
consciences will be peppered with questions about the forthcoming
elections.
Should they take part?
What guarantee do you have that Zanu PF will accept defeat?
The conscientious citizen
will weigh the options: not taking part must presuppose there is
a Plan B; if it has no provision for preventing the victory of the
ruling party, then it is a dud.
Taking part must entail
vigorous preparations, to ensure the largest number of voters turn
out at the polls.
Only in such a scenario
can the opposition stand a chance of beating Zanu PF, hands down
- it's the only way to win.
Most of the election
arsenal against Zanu PF has been provided by the party itself: the
economy is a prime example.
The splits within the
party are self-inflicted. There may be attempts to blame this on
Gordon Brown, Tony Blair or even Harold Wilson - Zanu PF's capacity
for creating scapegoats is unparalleled.
As of now, the party
has been shorn of all its dignity. The internal squabbling is not
unlike a beer hall brawl.
At the recent politburo
meeting in Harare last week every effort was made to present a picture
of unity. There was no indication that President Robert Mugabe had
earned the opprobrium of his colleagues by enlisting the dubious
talents of Jabulani Sibanda to stage nationwide pro-Mugabe solidarity
marches.
Sibanda, a discredited
war veteran, is using the former fighters as cannon fodder for Mugabe's
bid for an umpteenth term as president.
To most clinical analysts,
there is something utterly undignified in Mugabe's use of Sibanda.
If Mugabe is ready to
chuck his dignity overboard, then we must assume he is at the end
of his political tether.
For the same reason,
relating to dignity, all men and women of conscience must determine
that 2008 presents them with an opportunity to retrieve their dignity
from many years of political abuse by Zanu PF.
In Africa and the world,
they have been pilloried as thoroughly spineless, people who won
a 15-year struggle against a small band of heavily armed white supremacists,
but cannot now say Boo! to an 83-year-old despot who has brought
shame upon their country.
The fight for dignity
is bolstered by the humiliation of living without water and electricity
for days and weeks on end: all this, not because they have refused
to pay their taxes or their electricity and water bills, but because
of the inefficiency and corruption of a system over which Mugabe
has presided for 27 years.
Under this cronyism,
most people enjoying his favours are living, literally, off the
fat of the land: most have two or three farms, the most productive
properties previously owned by white commercial farmers.
They have the most sophisticated
farm implements to work with and are provided with such inputs as
fertilizer and other chemicals at the press of a button.
Zanu PF has a record
of political dishonesty which must persuade mature voters in 2008
to make the courageous decision to reject the party once and for
all.
If voters hoping for
a change of government had set great store in Zanu PF itself rejecting
Mugabe's attempts to prolong his torture of this land beyond 2008,
they must now realise that the party is putty in his hands.
Some optimists are still
hopeful that the Zanu PF congress called for December will unanimously
reject Mugabe. If that were to happen, it could herald a new era
for the ruling party.
It would be the first
time since Independence that his colleagues in the leadership have
said No to Mugabe on an issue of principle.
The principle here is
that, with Mugabe at the helm, Zanu PF has no guaranteed future
as a viable political party. Its record of success is so patchy,
it is a travesty of logic that it has won every presidential and
parliamentary election since 1980.
It is unreasonable to
believe that most of the men and women sitting with Mugabe at the
politburo meeting in Harare last week believe firmly that Mugabe
is right when he blames everyone and everything else, except himself,
for the pathetic state of the country.
The congress in December
may endorse Mugabe but only after the people who genuinely believe
he has done enough damage to this country are seduced in the horse-trading
that must precede his endorsement.
Assuming the congress
is conducted without the customary stage-managed tomfoolery, a decision
to start on a new slate could be accepted by the party.
A new candidate for president
could be named and Mugabe could be consigned to the role of "elder
statesman" of the party.
This would be a huge
gamble. The way ordinary voters feel about Zanu PF today, even the
party supporters would not hesitate to ditch the party candidate.
Most permutations so
far do not feature a deal between the MDC and Zanu PF on a more
or less permanent resolution of the political and economic crisis.
Morgan Tsvangirai has
been robustly positive in his rejection of a government of national
unity. But it's early days yet: some Sadc leaders would probably
not countenance Mugabe's humiliation - ending up with nothing, as
Kenneth Kaunda, Hastings Banda, Frederick Chiluba and Bakili Muluzi
did.
There is always the excuse
that Zimbabwe must not be plunged into turmoil after an election.
There are Sadc leaders who would prefer no change at all in Zimnbabwe.
They seem convinced that
a non-Zanu PF government would bring the British back into the colonial
saddle: after Zimbabwe, which of its neighbours would be the next?
In many respects, it
is this which should motivate Zimbabweans to regain their dignity:
to show they are not puppets of Mugabe or the British.
saidib@standard.co.zw
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