|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe's
political roller coaster hits another deep dip
Patrick Bond and Grace Kwinjeh
March 09, 2008
The March 29
election in Zimbabwe is very likely to result in Robert Mugabe winning,
by hook or by crook, a slim 50%+ majority, so as to avoid a run-off.
In the last presidential election, in 2002, his main opponent Morgan
Tsvangirai - leader of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions from 1988-99, but subsequently also
supported by business and most Western governments - officially
received just 40% of the vote.
Massive irregularities
- such as far fewer urban polling stations - were noted by
all honest observers, and the pre-election playing field was skewed
by lack of a free press, Tsvangirai's frame-up on a bogus treason
charge, and his party's inability to campaign peacefully in many
regions. He nearly certainly won, but was cheated out of a democratic,
peaceful regime change supported by most progressives in civil society.
Since then, core degenerative
dynamics have included economic rot, sustained political repression,
and two important splits in the dominant parties, Mugabe's Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu PF) and the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC)-Tsvangirai.
The first split was when
in October 2005, key officials of the MDC - led by secretary-general
Welshman Ncube and chairperson Gibson Sibanda - broke away
a small faction of supporters, due to what they claimed was Tsvangirai's
'dictatorial style-. The catalyst was Tsvangirai's insistence
on boycotting Mugabe's new Senate. Ironically, in this election
MDC-Tsvangirai has posted candidates for the Senate.
A brand new leader was
chosen for the breakaway group, Dr Arthur Mutambara, formerly a
firebrand student leader opposed to Mugabe's early 1990s structural
adjustment program and state corruption, who subsequently studied
at Oxford and Michigan, and by the mid-2000s moved back to the region,
to take a job at Johannesburg's Standard Bank.
An effort to rejoin the
two factions failed when MDC-Tsvangirai demanded too many parliamentary
seats in MDC-Mutambara's Matabeleland heartland, according to the
latter. Then Mutambara dropped out of the presidential race once
a brand new candidate - from the ruling party (the first substantial
defection since 1990) - jumped in to challenge Mugabe on February
5.
In Zanu PF's case, the
split may yet become serious, but now amounts to just renegade former
finance minister Simba Makoni, a long-term favorite of neo liberal
forces internal and external. By early March, only two other major
ruling party figures, former revolutionary Dumiso Dabengwa and parliamentary
leader Cyril Ndebele, publicly supported him.
Makoni's hoped for backing
by the powerful couple Solomon and Joyce Mujuru (Zimbabwe's vice-president)
not only failed to materialize, but Joyce then endorsed Mugabe.
Although she was once tipped as his successor, a different faction
in ZanuPF led by Emmerson Mnangagwa is expected to reign once Mugabe
finally retires. But the damage done in the meantime, including
the coming weeks of violent electioneering, will be extreme.
For example, the economic
contradictions of running a growing patronage-based regime with
a rapidly declining Gross Domestic Product are felt mainly in the
inflation rate. According to Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono,
67 trillion Zimbabwean dollars (US$33 million at the effective exchange
rate in January) were in circulation but could not be traced inside
the financial system.
The banks had only Z$2
trillion cash on hand. Said Gono, "The rest of the money is
with cash barons who have opened mini-central banks at their houses.
Unfortunately the people doing that are influential citizens with
leadership positions."
One accused was the former
chairperson of the Finance Portfolio Committee in Parliament, David
Butau, who escaped to Britain. Butau's rebuttal was that he was
about to make a stunning revelation of "shady deals" by
the central bank: "Gono should publish all the payments he
made to Flatwater, to Michigan as well as declare how he bought
shares in Doves." At least Z$7 trillion is estimated to have
been captured by these shady shell companies in recent months.
Instead of coming to
grips with cronyism, Gono's solution is to print infinite numbers
of Z$, using expensive imported German paper. With inflation rising
far beyond the 100,000% level, amongst the highest recorded in world
history, there are only a few areas Zimbabweans can dump money into
so as not to see it evaporate instantly: hard currency, real estate,
local stock market shares and durable consumer goods.
As a result of the cash
shortage thus caused, a large proportion of Zimbabweans suffered
the Christmas and New Year holiday break without access to money.
The shortages of cash and basic goods - electricity, clean
water, petrol, most medicines, many foodstuffs - epitomizes the
freefall of a once quite prosperous site for a largish middle class.
Meanwhile the tiny, kleptocratic
ruling elite grew wealthy at the expense of the vast majority of
people, as unemployed soared to more than 80%. Life expectancy for
an average Zimbabwean dropped to 32 and 37 years for females and
males respectively, and AIDS medicines that were once available
have become scarce. The education system faces near total collapse.
Without growing electricity
supplies, there is little hope of an upturn. Mozambique's Hidroelectrica
de Cahora Bassa power utility recently suspended supplies over an
outstanding debt of US$26 million. The South African parastatal
Eskom cut Zimbabwe's power supply when in January regular 'load-shedding'
electricity shortages hit home.
As for the durable political
repression faced by any opposition politician or civil society activist,
anyone brave enough could have remarked upon Mugabe's monomaniacal
and extremely violent tendencies from at least 1982, not long after
the country-s liberation from white-ruled Rhodesia. Over the
subsequent four years, the Matebeleland region witnessed the North
Korean-trained Fifth Brigade massacre over 20 000 civilians, mostly
of the Ndebele ethnic group.
The West preferred to
look the other way, courting Mugabe as an ally in part to persuade
the apartheid government to begin gradually deracialising capitalism,
the way Zimbabwe was - ever so gradually. By 1989, whites
still received 97% of bank loans, though they were 3% of the population;
during the 1990s white control of land actually grew thanks to liberalisation
and lower state spending.
As the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund began screw-tightening from 1984, intensifying
the loan flows and neo liberal pressure in 1991, Zimbabwe's once
impressive expansion of health clinics and schools, the development
of a state-based middle- and lower-middle-class, and the sustenance
of the inherited vibrant manufacturing sector, all waned.
Then the inevitable
IMF Riots began in the early 1990s, growing in intensity and numbers
of aggrieved constituencies until 1997. That year Mugabe began the
political and economic zigzagging for which he is now famous. There
were new patronage payments to liberation war veterans following
embarrassing protests, and a new war against Democratic Republic
of the Congo rebels (with Mugabe propping up Laurent Kabila), whose
high costs were offset by army elite accumulation.
Alongside deep structural
economic rot, the fiscal drain and threats of radical land reform
led to a late 1997 currency crash. In 2000, after losing a referendum
on a new Constitution, Mugabe authorised the war vets to invade
white farmers' properties (some inherited from Rhodesian days but
a large share paid for in cash since liberation in 1980 after the
state declined its first option to buy), causing a substantial agricultural
sector collapse. By then, too, corruption was so well entrenched
that inevitably, civil society turned to alternative organisations
for political inspiration. A Working People's Convention in 1999
mandated the trade unions to form a new party, and the MDC was born.
But by early 2000, it
appeared the white business elite had captured the MDC, as economic
spokesperson Eddie Cross promised the privatisation of "everything",
including the schools. In subsequent years a more explicitly social-democratic
ideology was adopted.
However, last July, the
first drafts of the MDC's 2008 electoral programme were shown to
officials of the libertarian Cato Institute in Washington; in contrast,
it was only at last month's launch that Zimbabwean civil society
got its first glance at the quite uninspired manifesto. Makoni's
is just as vapid. And Mugabe's will change nothing.
Some may conclude, then,
that the March 29 election is only interesting from the standpoint
of personalities operating within preconstrained 20th century paradigms
(nationalism and neoliberalism), with little or no mass popular
content or appeal. And after all, nearly all the prior contested
elections - since 1990 - have been marked by rigging, state
sponsored violence, and repressive legislation curtailing media
and political freedoms.
For this, plus sustained
repressive behavior, Mugabe and more than 100 top officials face
Western personalised "smart sanctions" - travel bans and
account freezes - as well as an arms embargo. China and Russia
subsequently became much more important trading partners.
But one major regional
supporter of Mugabe continues to have influence: South African president
Thabo Mbeki. Although displaced as African National Congress president
by Jacob Zuma in December, and although Zuma's labor backers hate
Mugabe and expect him to shift tack, there was no apparent change
in the nurturing of the Zimbabwean dictatorship from Pretoria in
subsequent weeks. South African officials continued to hope and
"expect" a "free and fair election".
Mbeki had gained
a mandate from regional governments to mediate the Zimbabwe crisis
in March 2007, and managed to sucker both MDC-Tsvangirai and MDC-Mutambara
into endless talks
that gained superficial legislative changes. Late last year, amendments
were made to the Electoral
Act and the Access
to Information and Privacy Act, but there is still no free press
and highly constrained ability to even campaign for the coming election.
Worse, Mugabe unilaterally
announced the 29 March election date, which the MDC desperately
wanted postponed until June so as to vet the now-corrupted voters'
roll and also gain more media and non-violent campaigning space.
It was clear the Mbeki negotiations were a stalling and divide-and-conquer
tactic, and that this worked to raise hopes of internal reform in
the two MDC camps.
In the context of recent
upheavals rocking Kenya over disputed elections, can Zimbabwe afford
another stolen poll? Unfortunately, there may be insubstantial protests
from the political elites who lose. A top official of MDC-Tsvangirai,
Johannesburg-based former member of parliament Roy Bennett, specifically
called on the party's constituents not to hit the streets, though
he suggested no other recourse than more talks.
And the smaller MDC-Mutambara
seems able to stomach any level of state repression in the interests
of elite participation, a matter embarrassingly obvious when Makoni
snubbed Mutumbara's attempt at an alliance last month - yet the
latter still endorsed the former.
In short, what was once
a united opposition, one strong enough to defeat Mugabe's sponsored
Constitutional proposals in a 2000 Referendum, is now deeply fractured,
but on personality not substantive lines.
This leaves
us to search for the main wellspring of hope for a Zimbabwean recovery
within those courageous civil society forces who remain. In early
February, reminiscent of the Working People's Convention nine years
earlier, more than 5000 representatives of activist groups gathered
for the National People's Convention. Key groups included the trade
unions, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise, the National Students Union, National
Constitutional Assembly, Christian Alliance, Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition, and Lawyers
for Human Rights.
The resulting
Peoples Charter touched on many issues, including constitutional
reform, gender, elections, the economy. The most fundamental statement
to come out of this gathering was the resolve, "never again
shall we let lives be lost, maimed, tortured or traumatized by the
dehumanizing experiences of political intolerance, violence and
lack of democratic government."
*Professor Patrick Bond is the Director of the Centre for Civil
Society in Durban, and Grace Kwinjeh is a South African-based Zimbabwean
journalist.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|