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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
elections: waiting for Godot
Alex Magaisa, Zimbabwe Standard
April 05, 2008
View article
on the Zimbabwe Standard website
Waiting for Godot is
an epic play by Samuel Beckett, in which, as the title suggests,
the characters spend time waiting for Godot.
However, Godot never
arrives. For most Zimbabweans, this has been a hard week, waiting
for a definitive outcome of the elections. At times, it has seemed
like waiting for Godot.
It has been a week of
speculation, conspiracy theorising and true to character Zimbabweans
have dealt with their pain and anxiety with good doses of humour.
For instance, there was an email depicting a skeletal figure represented
in slow motion, a reflection of the snail's pace with which the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), has been announcing the election
results.
And yet another suggested
that since the formal outcome from the ZEC were taking so long,
it might become necessary to resort to the parallel market for results.
And the parallel market for results has been as vibrant as the parallel
market for foreign currency and goods on which most Zimbabweans
have relied in the last few hard years. The lack of information
has spawned a huge parallel market of information, which has kept
the public occupied.
Even international broadcasters
appear to have been dominant players in this parallel market, feeding
off the rumour-mill and fuelling it at the same time. A dramatic
headline one minute, only to be replaced in the next minute by yet
another dramatic one. Hopes raised one minute, deflated in the next
and so went the cycle.
Plainly, the
choreographed announcement of results has been part of an elaborate
plan by Zanu PF to manage the shock and pain of electoral defeat
at the hands of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
The whole episode has been like a long book of many small and diverse
chapters which you just cannot put down, even for a moment. More
importantly, it has been a calculated attempt at handling the alleged
defeat of President Mugabe by Morgan Tsvangirai in the presidential
election. These are people who are not used to defeat and plainly,
they have had great difficulty swallowing the fact that most ordinary
Zimbabweans no longer trust them with power. For even if the result
was not enough to give Tsvangirai the presidency without a run-off,
it is still a huge embarrassment that Mugabe could have gained less
votes than his nemesis. There is very little left to the imagination
here. If Mugabe had won and they were confident about it, they would
surely have announced the result amid pomp and fanfare. That they
have not is, itself an indication of loss and the difficulty of
dealing with, let alone accepting it. It says something about the
role and effectiveness of elections in the world of Zanu PF politics
that a party organ, the Politburo is called upon to discuss the
election results before the people who voted are informed of the
outcome. This column has previously questioned and cast doubt on
the role of elections in deciding the hard leadership questions
in Zimbabwe.
Events surrounding this election in this drama appear to give credence
to the theory that we may have misplaced faith in elections and
that answers to the leadership question in Zimbabwe lie in a land
beyond the ballot box. It would seem that in Zanu PF's world, an
election is only as good as a confirmation of their determination
to stay in power. Anything else is treated with caution and derision.
We have here, men and women with a strong, but misplaced, belief
that the people of Zimbabwe owe them something. Their world is defined
by the 1960s and 70s when they led the liberation struggle. In this
world, neither their failures in the post-independence era nor the
lack of plans or ability to address the current problems can mask
the glory of their greatest hour. Their outlook is defined, not
by the plight or wishes of the people of Zimbabwe but their perceived
battle against the forces of colonialism. They have not moved out
of that mode - for them it's a continuing battle - they are saying,
with uninhibited arrogance, "No; all of you ordinary Zimbabweans
are in the dark. You know not what you do, so we will show you the
way". They probably consider themselves supreme beings living
far ahead of their people and are, therefore, only doing what is
necessary to "educate" the masses. They cannot understand
why the people are being so ungrateful. It is a strange world they
inhabit these people - far removed from reality of the ordinary
people.
Zimbabweans are faced
with the hard political question of how to translate "winning
an election" into "winning power". Zanu PF lost the
election but they still control the power of the State. The great
fear is that it appears to give meaning to Mugabe's unfortunate
comments prior to the election, when he said that Tsvangirai would
never rule as long as he is alive. He did not say Tsvangirai would
never win an election. It is negotiating that path from winning
an election to assuming power that is now the great challenge. The
ballot box, therefore, appears to be the catalyst for change, but
not the sole, decisive factor.
At present Zimbabweans
are having to contend with a form of a constitutional dictatorship,
with Mugabe as the sole holder of power in the country, in the absence
of parliament. Not even the parliamentarians who have won can have
legal authority until they are sworn in and according to Section
63(4) of the Constitution,
the period of tenure of parliament is deemed to commence on the
day the person elected as President enters office. The elected parliamentarians
have no choice but to await the election of the President. The risk
of prolonging this constitutional dictatorship is heightened by
the fact that the President has far-reaching powers to make law
under the Presidential
Powers (Temporary Measures) Act. Sometimes, you do wonder, if
Zimbabwe could find an alchemist, perhaps a Rotina Mavhunga (she
of the Chinhoyi magic diesel claims), to convert all the mineral
wealth into black gold. Perhaps the world might care a little more.
You do wonder, whether we are simply doomed to fail. Or perhaps
that we are at that point in an arduous trek through the vast desert;
at that point where we can see the palm trees; the point where we
can see the signs of water. Are we destined to succumb to thirst
just as the palm trees appear on the horizon? Sometimes you do wonder,
whether we are all waiting for Godot. And that, as in Beckett's
drama, Godot may never come.
Alex Magaisa
is based at The University of Kent Law School and can be contacted
at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
or a.t.magaisa@kent.ac.uk
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.
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