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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
The
'makonifactor- in the Zimbabwe presidential race - seeing
into the future
Maggie Makanza
February 07, 2008
I know my vote is my secret that is if ZANU (PF) does not steal
it. I am one of those Zimbabweans who was undecided whether to vote
in the upcoming elections. I have been pondering on what the March
elections mean to an ordinary Zimbabwean suffering from cash shortages,
lack of electricity, water, transport, housing, food. An economy
that has been taken five centuries back with a collapsed health
and education delivery system reducing every Zimbabwean into destitution
and sending many into exile. The catalogue of tragedies suffered
by Zimbabweans is endless. I had therefore come to the conclusion
that, a contest between a split MDC and ZANU PF was an exercise
in futility and that the outcome of the elections was predictable.
The elections will come and go and the suffering of Zimbabweans
will continue unabated. This time stolen votes or not, after hearing
that Dr. Simba Makoni has thrown himself into the race, I have decided
that I am going to vote. But the decision of who I vote for like
any other Zimbabwean has to be a very well considered position based
on facts and devoid of the emotional political rhetoric that characterise
most discourse on Zimbabwe.
That Zimbabweans
do not want ZANU PF or more specifically Mugabe, is not a point
of contention or discussion. However, there are mixed emotions on
the vote for the MDC which has largely been a vote against ZANU
PF. The MDC, largely seen as the party that made the first serious
challenge to Mugabe’s power may have many sympathisers and have
earned respect for the many gallant fights that they have engaged
with the ZANU PF government. They have been bruised and battered
and have wounds to show for the struggle for democracy. However,
the elections this March will be a test for the MDC’s fitness for
governance. We have proof that ZANU PF is not fit to govern and
every Zimbabwean can testify to that. I am then going to soberly
ask the question ‘Is the MDC fit to govern’. This may be
seen as a highly unfair and emotive question. Of cause the MDC has
not been tested so how can we know if they are fit to govern. This
is not meant to be a tricky examination question by some learned
professor but a reality check. It reminds me of a boy-girl relationship,
head over heels in love, the girl marries the boy against the better
judgement of the elders. While the elders saw it coming, she was
too emotionally involved to see. Such is the plight of many of us
as Zimbabweans being knee deep into the political saga, are all
bruised and battered and emotionally charged to think rationally.
Being the ‘scene’, it makes it difficult to be the ‘seer’.
But the question is how could the elders have known before the marriage
was sanctified? What where the signs and symptoms that allowed the
‘elders’ to see the future and predict it with such accuracy. It
will not last, they had warned the girl. But of cause such advice
had fallen on deaf ears. If you were the political adviser on Zimbabwe,
what would you be advising ordinary Zimbabweans to do with regards
to the upcoming elections? Boycott elections or go and make their
choices between the incumbent Robert Mugabe, Tsvangirai(MDC1, Mtambara(MDC11),
Simba Makoni etal in the mix.
It has been
well argued that ZANU PF may have been effective as a liberation
movement but did not have the capacity to govern and rule a nation.
I think the same may apply to the MDC today. While the MDC may have
been at the fore front and championed the fight for democracy, the
question must still be asked, are they fit to govern? Are they ready
to govern? The harsh reality is that while a grader may be allowed
on the road to clear the way, once the path is cleared and the road
tarred, it is not allowed to travel on the very same road that it
charted. Such may be the plight of the MDC in the upcoming elections.
The issue is
not whether the MDC should participate in elections or not as asked
elsewhere. They are damned if they do, and damned if they don’t
following a comedy of tragic errors in the Mbeki brokered negotiations
with ZANU PF and self-centredness shown through its recent failure
to unite the splintered Tsvangirai/Mutambara factions over a mere
20 seats in parliament. I also read elsewhere that sitting MPs in
the Tsvangirai led faction will retain their seats and not contest
primary elections. Perhaps they do not understand the very democracy
that they are fighting for. While Zimbabwe is burning, they haggle
over 20 seats in parliament and are interested in protecting their
positions, so what is the difference with ZANU PF? For a Christian,
I am quite unforgiving of behaviour that clearly puts self interests
ahead of common good.
I have warned
you already about the need to be brutal with facts and not be guided
by emotions. An analysis of the MDC’s comedy of errors reveals a
party leadership that is naïve, politically immature and obsessed
with getting to state house as an end in itself. Lack of clear leadership
and capacity to take advantage of the many opportunities presenting
in Zimbabwe for change have left me doubting the MDC’s capacity
not only to dislodge the ZANU PF regime from power but also to govern.
MDC has earned itself the description of ‘a popular but largely
ineffective opposition in Zimbabwe’. The strategies employed
to date to oust the Mugabe regime has left many wondering when they
will deliver the change promised two parliamentary elections ago.
Ineffectiveness suggests use of inappropriate approaches, irrelevant
tools and methods (that may have worked in the past but are no longer
effective) coupled with poor analysis of the situation and lack
of clear direction. As the saying goes, if you continue to do the
same thing, you will always get what you have always gotten-in this
case defeat. This requires changes in tactics and approaches (zvinoda
kuchinja maitiro) as the MDC saying goes. The MDC and ZANU (PF)
have failed to move the country beyond their differences and judging
by how conflicts have gone elsewhere in Africa, the stalemate can
last for decades while people on the ground are suffering.
In an earlier
article, in August, 2006, titled’ The Anatomy of Zimbabwe’s Problems’
I described Zimbabweans as a people caught between a rock and a
hard place; a brutal dictatorial regime and an ineffectual opposition’.
So the makonifactor as I call it, unlike any other third-force
factors in the form of small political parties, MDC2, will give
Zimbabweans something to think about in the polling booth.. It is
no longer an either MDC or ZANU PF situation in the presidential
choices. If we had to make an unemotional decision, who would you
vote for on the basis of capacity and potential to bring about real
change. Remembering my boy-girl scenario, if your life depended
on it (of course it depends on it), and you were asked to
advise the people of Zimbabwe at these crucial elections, what would
you say? If you are alone in bed (maybe with your spouse),
without influence from anyone, as things stand, who would you vote
for to bring about a lasting change to the political crisis in Zimbabwe.
What reasons would you advance for such as choice?
Most would vote
with their hearts and not their minds in this instance and choose
to reward Tsvangirai for the long battle against Mugabe. Much as
we emotionally voted for ZANU PF for several years following independence
justifying to ourselves that since they had fought the war to liberate
us, they deserved our vote irrespective of clear signs of dictatorship.
We have arrived 27 years later, and realise the gravity of our mistake.
The same romantic relationship that the people had at independence
with ZANU/ZAPU PF has also been established between the people and
the MDC. Where we are justifying a vote for them because we believe
they owe us the vote by virtue of the fact that they struggled for
democracy. ZANU Pf monopolised the struggle for independence and
held the nation at ransom and made us feel that we owed them for
having liberated us. And that it was their privilege to rule us.
Are we going to be repeating the same mistake despite clear signs
of dictatorship in the midst of the MDC? Shouldn’t we say no to
dictatorship now whether it is in ZANU PF or the MDC? I think we
are in danger of being trapped by the very nature of the relationship
that is developing within the MDC were the struggle for democracy
is being personalised and monopolised. Will the MDC hold us to ransom
and claim the right to rule? Dr. Simba Makoni is offering himself
to the people of Zimbabwe. Are we going to simply reject him on
the basis that he has no scar to show for the struggle against Mugabe?
Are scars from the liberation war and now the struggle for democracy
the real and only qualification to rule? As the famous saying by
Chinotimba ’I died for this country’.
I am tired of
playing the ZANU (PF)/MDC game in which all of us emerge as losers.
They have had their chance and now it is time for a new game, with
new actors. I am off to check my name in the voters roll. Dr Simba
Makoni will have my vote. He has taken a calculated risk and has
the courage to oppose Mugabe. But more importantly, simply because
of the person that he is. For him to have remained ‘clean’
so to speak under a party that thrives on patronage and initiation
by corruption is for me something to marvel about. He has national,
regional and international experience in governance. I urge you
to pause and think soberly about the forthcoming elections and ask
yourself, as things stand, who has the qualification to rule. History
will judge us harshly should we miss this opportunity to usher to
Zimbabwe a new political era.
So, Beware the
Ides of March.
*Maggie
Makanza is a social commentator and writes from Cape Town, South
Africa. She would like your feedback on this article and can be
contacted by email on maggiemakanza@yahoo.com
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