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In
2008: What ought to happen versus what will happen
Innocent Madawo, The Southern African
January 03, 2008
Read
Madawo's response to comments made regarding this article
History
of hope
Twenty years ago Zimbabwe
saved itself from a five-year insurgency - the so-called Dissident
Era - that threatened to plunge the country into a civil war of
the proportions seen in neighbouring Mozambique and in Angola.
True nationalism and patriotism (if somewhat forced in some instances)
prevailed over personal interests when in 1987, then Prime Minister,
Robert Mugabe-s ruling Zanu (PF) party united with its bitter
rival, the late Joshua Nkomo-s PF-Zapu, to form the existing
and ruling United Zanu PF party that went on to form a government
of national unity under Mugabe as president and Nkomo as co-vice
president with the late Simon Muzenda.
That unity was by no means perfect but it served the most important
purpose of uniting the nation and redirecting its socio-economic
development to occupy a high perch in regional, continental and
even world scales.
This was, of course, until the ill-conceived war veterans-
compensation of 1997; the military misadventure in the Democratic
Republic of Congo in 1998 and the ill-fated land redistribution
exercise of 2000 and beyond.
There are various reasons why the unity of 1987 was mooted and implemented
but the ultimate realisation was that only Zimbabweans could rescue
themselves from themselves.
If it hasn-t dawned already, it is my submission that the
same realisation must guide the nation to invoke the same spirit
of the late 1980s and apply it in 2008.
Election as a source of renewal
Zimbabwe is scheduled
to hold joint presidential and parliamentary elections in March.
The opposition Movement for Democratic Change has made a valid request
- in my view - that the elections be postponed to allow for a number
of provisions to be included. These include reconstituting the voter
registration which has been in shambles for decades now.
It is common, for example; to find on the current register, names
of dead people or citizens like me, who last voted in 2000 and have
been out of the country since 2001. It has often been reported that
such "ghost" or "absentee" registrants have
voted, almost entirely for the ruling party.
The opposition also seeks an assurance that all eligible voters
will be allowed to register and exercise their right in a free and
fair election that is monitored by many international observers
who are of undisputed repute. May I also add to this requirement
that those outside the country be allowed to vote. There is an estimated
2-3 million of us, a number to large to ignore.
Only when reasonable accommodations have been made should the elections
be held. If that happens in March or months later, it will be to
the benefit of the country.
The results of elections held in hopefully accommodative -
forget perfect - conditions, should be accepted by all. There
will definitely be winners and losers but the challenge Zimbabwe
faces now cannot be overcome by merely holding elections and letting
winners set about correcting all the wrongs that have been made.
This, I say with obvious knowledge that the likely winners -
even in a near perfect situation - are Zanu PF and cannot,
therefore, be expected to clean up their own mess.
Thus, much as the elections are needed for formality, a government
of national unity would still be necessary because the country has
been so polarized that only a united front will be able to rebuild
the crumbling economy and convince the international community to
rally behind a democratic Zimbabwe.
If this unity is achieved, then its leaders- first task is
to launch a cleansing exercise to rid the country of its political
and socio-economic rot and to spearhead a diplomatic offensive that
should see the West join China and the rest of the East and Africa
to form an investment and aid beeline to Zimbabwe before the end
of 2008.
If Jacob Zuma and Thabo Mbeki can accommodate each other in the
ANC and Mwai Kibaki and Raila Odinga agree to put Kenyan national
aspirations ahead of their personal egos, so should Mugabe, Morgan
Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara.
In fact, the ongoing SADC-brokered talks between Zanu PF and MDC
- which have already produced a number of positive amendments
to the constitution - should ultimately result in a unity
of "national" purpose.
The nightmare that is sad reality
If my submissions above
were a dream I hope to come true, here is the nightmare that is
a sad reality.
Elections will go on in March under conditions that favour Zanu
PF, that is, the voter registration will not be updated, exiled
Zimbabweans will not be allowed to vote and some observers will
be barred, particularly those from the West.
The build up to the elections will be violent - as usual,
if not worse this time around - with opposition supporters
constituting a majority of victims. If both factions of the MDC
boycott the elections, Zanu PF will help create one or two fly-by-night
parties to legitimize the elections.
Results are forgone really. For President Mugabe and Zanu PF it
will be a case of "as we were comrades". The opposition
will dispute the results and its supporters will take to the streets.
There will be dead bodies, looting and destruction of property but
do not expect this to reach the scale of the Kenyan violence, both
in terms of human loss and days of rioting. The Zimbabwe security
system is better prepared than the Kenyans. A combination of the
Zimbabwe National Army, the Zimbabwe Republic Police, the Central
Intelligence Organisation and the Zanu PF Youth National Service
(Green Bombers) will gang up to thwart any street protests.
An escalation of violence, if it happens, will be perpetrated by
the same security system in opposition strongholds.
Having consolidated its position as an "elected" government,
Zanu PF will set about to do "business as usual" picking
up it-s messing of the economy from wherever it would have
left off before the elections.
Mugabe, buoyed by the election and the unwavering support by the
rest of Africa and other anti-Western forces, will continue to preach
his anti-Britain and America doctrine.
The world, whose attention is constantly distracted by "breaking
news" in other parts of the world, will once again forget
the country that once represented hope in an African continent desperate
for recognition as a region leaving behind its dark past.
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