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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
- who can halt the slide to inevitable violence?
Sam Kabele, Pambazuka News
April 16, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category//47412
Sam Kabele looks
at the fault lines along which violence in Zimbabwe is traveling
and calls for solidarity the Zimbabwean people
At the time
of writing President Mugabe is refusing to engage with his reasonably
supine fellow southern African leaders, concerned about the crisis
and lack of declared results from the presidential elections. Instead
he has chosen the path he knows best, that of formal and informal
state-inspired violence with reports coming in especially in Manicaland
of targeted intimidation and beatings of opposition activists, especially
in areas that swung to MDC. The votes in the parliamentary elections
went so overwhelming for the opposition that the government was
unable to fix that election and we thus had a historic victory for
the Movement for Democratic Change. It seems clear the ruling ZANU-PF
party is desperately trying to avoid a similar meltdown in the presidential
ones. So, unsurprisingly, Zimbabwe-s High Court refused to
rule on the MDC-s urgent application for release of the presidential
election results on April 14.
As President
Mugabe opts for the path he knows best, that of formal and informal
state-inspired violence, it is worth asking how we even reached
the stage where the opposition was allowed to win the parliamentary
elections and where the usual violence and intimidation appear not
to have paid off. Were the ruling party over-confident and the rest
of us, expecting the usual stolen election, too dismissive of the
effect of the crisis on ordinary Zimbabweans - urban and rural?
Of course in any normal situation, hyperinflation signals an end
to any ruling government, but Zimbabwean 'normality-
has been different since 2000, and arguably before that. Given the
normal retaliation that ZANU-PF unleashes when it is threatened
as in 2000 after the referendum (farm invasions etc) and Operation
Murambatsvina after 2005, there is a second and probably more
important question. Who is willing and able to stop a descent into
repression and violence? And, thirdly, who in Zimbabwe and the region
has the strategic vision to change this? Is there still the possibility
of a peaceful transition (even if not a transformation as such)?
The ZANU-PF
government has largely appeared impervious to international pressure
to reverse repression and its economic policies. Zimbabwe has few
close allies, after leaving the Commonwealth, having been near to
expulsion from the International Monetary Fund (perhaps the only
possibly advantageous element), its policies criticised by the UN
and some African institutions like the African Commission on Human
and Peoples Rights, and with its elite subject to 'smart-
sanctions from the EU, Switzerland, US, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand. It has retained some African, Chinese and some Third World
state and popular support by astute playing of the 'anti-imperialist
card-. Is, however, the southern African region now sufficiently
worried to push harder for real change after the (unadmitted) failure
of their negotiation process and the obvious gerrymandering of the
'harmonised elections-?
Can
Zimbabweans continue the momentum of their massive rejection of
ZANU-PF?
Whilst
the results dribbled out, the courts are largely supine and the
counter-offensive starts. After the failure of the negotiation process
and the obvious gerrymandering of the 'harmonised elections-
perhaps the real question is whether their self-interest in a reformed
ZANU-PF without Mugabe is likely to continue? With the exception
of South Africa-s ANC president Jacob Zuma - who called for
the election results to be declared after meeting Zimbabwe-s
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai - the region has been largely
silent. It has, however, after its weekend summit issued a lame
statement calling for the election results to be 'expeditiously-
declared and for the parties to contest any run-off. This is despite
evidence of increased intimidation and violence and strong opposition
from regional civil society.
The only path
appears to be people power, but is the fearful population, committed
peaceful forms, subject to eight years of intimidation, and having
to engage in every possible strategy for mere survival able to sustain
this? Recent general strikes such as the one called for from 15th
April cannot really be anything other than staying at home since
only 8% of Zimbabweans are actually employed.
It has been
argued that in any transition Zimbabwe should be characterised as
a post-conflict state since it exhibits many characteristics of
a society in violent conflict due to the scale of economic collapse
and casualisation, political violence and social trauma, the breakdown
of basic services (although the party structure of ZANU-PF remains
intact), mass flight of people and capital. Zimbabwe currently has
the highest rate of inflation in the world, with an annual rate
of over 100,000%.
- Wages have
plummeted as the cost of necessities spirals out of control. About
80% of the country-s population lives in poverty, while
about 3 million people have left the country in search of work.
- Failed agricultural
policies have meant widespread food shortages of food with this
year-s harvest predicted to be one of the lowest on record.
- Agriculture
was the motor of the pre-crisis economy, but is massively depleted
in production and export. Zimbabwe once a food exporter (in good
years) is now food insecure with up to half the population reliant
on food aid.
- The above
is particularly worrying given the generalized HIV and AIDS pandemic
and life expectancy being the lowest in the world at 34 years
for men and 33 years for women.
- The humanitarian
crisis is exacerbated by government food distribution being manipulated
to secure votes.
- Demands for
change emanating from civil society have been routinely suppressed
by the state, including the use of assaults, arrests and torture.
The number of health professionals fleeing the country has escalated
while resources for the health sector have collapsed, with dire
effects on the around 20% of the population with HIV or AIDS.
The strategies
of the Zimbabwean state of both structural and physical violence
in all its parallels with the last years of apartheid seem to be
both unravelling and at the same time becoming more vicious. The
combination of centrally directed and presidential-inspired incitement
to violence, including sexual violence, securitisation of state
institutions, state of emergency in all but name, the use of informer
networks and covert 'Third Force- hit squads to brutalise
the opposition and destroy its structures before elections, and
the manipulation of the media and hate speech attacks, all seek
to provide ideological justification for the demonisation of the
opposition and licensed informal violence. However, whether through
over-confidence or under pressure from South Africa and the region,
there was less violence in this election with both the opposition
factions of the MDC and the ZANU-PF 'renegade- Simba
Makoni being able to campaign in rural areas.
Several post-Mugabe
scenarios are possible, including a transition to Mugabeism without
Mugabe, an MDC-led government, the rise of a reformist faction within
ZANU-PF, a broad government of national unity, a military coup,
or even a descent into chaos. But at present a Mugabe hardball response
urged on by the 'Jacobin- faction inside the party around
a presidential run-off seems likely. Violence and intimidation have
worked in the past to keep the president in power, have tended to
divert the party from its internal divisions, and sidelines the
'moderate- ZANU-PF faction which is tempted to reach
out to MDC and the international community - not least to
try to safeguard their businesses, and other resources including
land. Use of the militia and to some extent the police also avoids
using the military some of whose loyalty is suspect - at elite
level where the would-be kingmaker is thought to have bankrolled
the Makoni presidential bid, and at lower ranks level, where many
soldiers presumably voted MDC.
Elections
The
background to the elections was of fear of state-sanctioned violence
through use of police, military and militias with the aim of ensuring
a ruling party victory at whatever cost. Conditions for free and
fair elections in the called for in the recent pastoral letter from
the Catholic bishops were not followed. Key aspects of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) Principles and Guidelines Governing
Democratic Elections, ratified by the Zimbabwean government were
not respected. These included the pro-government bias of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC), insufficient mechanisms for voter registration
and roll inspection and ZEC failing to clearly publicise boundaries
of new voting constituencies and locations of polling stations.
There was also the disqualification of three million diaspora Zimbabweans,
lack of voter education, state domination of the media and a lack
of independent international and civil society observers.
All reports
from partners and credible observers note that the organisation
of the elections was partisan, the opposition parties had little
access to state media and to rural areas of the country, and the
state media overwhelmingly privileged the messages of the ruling
ZANU-PF party. Nor was there sufficient time between the unilateral
announcement on 25th January of the election date for political
parties to organise their campaigns. Indeed the electoral commission
itself was disorganised as well as partisan. The weighting of the
new constituencies is also towards the rural areas - normally
seen as government strongholds where opposition parties rarely get
access. (But it seems that rural voters were less intimated, including
in areas that were formerly ZANU-PF-leaning, although there have
to be concerns about any second round where there are no observers).
There were widespread reports of government attempting to buy voters-
allegiances through provision of agricultural equipment and (deferred)
pay rises to the armed forces and teachers. President Mugabe also
amended the electoral law on 18th March to allow the police into
polling stations - widely seen as an intimidating tactic, although
it is not certain that it was that effective.
What
needs to be done now in relation to elections
The
conditions of the post-election period do not promise well for Zimbabwe
escaping from its current interlinked crises and hence helping to
stem the increasing poverty of its citizens. Civil society is currently
working out its strategy, but it is uncertain what the MDC-s
is bar the general strike weapon and Tsvangirai-s regional
tour of uninterested leaders. There are worries in civil society
that violence and intimidation will characterise any possible second
round and that manipulation of results is aimed at gaining either
an outright victory or to provide a weakened MDC that will be railroaded
into a spurious government of 'national unity- to provide
greater regional and international legitimacy for continued ZANU-PF
misrule.
It seems that
any effective response to the Zimbabwean crisis must be African-led,
however unlikely that currently seems. There should be support and
encouragement for the efforts of the African Union (AU) and SADC
to provide stronger political mediation in the post-election period
aimed at securing government commitment to political and economic
reform and to the restoration of basic rights of citizens. Secondly,
there is a need to respond to the long-term humanitarian crisis
and its effects on the people of Zimbabwe.
Even if Mugabe
were to win the run-off vote he faces a country in total meltdown.
A transition point - if not a transformation point - now appears
inevitable. The immediate tasks will be to reform the security and
legal sectors; create legitimate institutions of government; political
reconciliation; rebuild the state; economic recovery, normalisation
of relations with the international community for aid; debt relief
and investment. All will take place under circumstances in which
Zimbabweans will be extremely vulnerable to externally imposed agendas.
Sequencing of
reform will be vital. A return to due process of law and transparency
needs to take place with depoliticisation, demilitarisation and
demilitia-isation of formal and informal state institutions top
of the agenda. Perhaps Zimbabwe can then start to move away from
a culture of violence, impunity, corruption and cronyism.
Addressing the
question of land will be a volatile process. There will need to
be a detailed investigation into who has what land under what conditions.
It would be politically unacceptable to return to the highly unequal
colonial-pattern of land ownership. But for those former commercial
farmers prepared to share their expertise innovative land sharing/
renting schemes could be piloted.
The tasks will
be immense and there is already talk of creating a Trust Fund to
help Zimbabwe-s absorptive capacity which will be fairly modest.
Measures to help the skilled and the diaspora return will need to
be balanced with employment creating schemes for those who stayed,without
overwhelming what few social services remain. Health care professionals
could be invited back, initially on a short term basis without losing
residence rights elsewhere, and with a range of inventive packages.
A national convention
process could be vital in producing a new people-driven constitution.
A stakeholder conference to take this forward could address issues
of constitutional reform, electoral reform, land reform, truth recovery
and economic and social recovery.
Promoting justice
and reconciliation will be a long term process, but Zimbabwe is
one of the best-documented sustained human rights abuse processes.
Finally from a rather longer run historical view are we seeing the
end of the sustainability of the nationalist/ liberation project
as it is unable to recuperate and reproduce itself except through
violence? State authoritarianism had the dual inheritance of the
interventionist settler state and the command politics of the liberation
movements.
The seeming
illogicality of the politics of disorder has been functional for
rewarding clients and supporters, once the original nationalist
coalition of workers, peasants, trade unionists, urban dwellers,
students and intellectuals had been destroyed through structural
adjustment, elite accumulation strategies and corruption. ZANU-PF
has been unable to address what Chris Alden saw as the interlinked
crises of illegitimacy, expectations and governance; it has only
been able to respond through violence/ clientilism, destruction
of the disparate social forces opposed to it such as farmers, farmworkers
and urban dwellers through militarisation/ militia-isation. This
has been accompanied by a location of the crisis as external -
Western imperialism and 'sanctions-. Whilst these have
their niche the crisis is overwhelmingly local although not without
an initial external dimension that Patrick Bond has pointed to -
acceptance of settler debts, ESAP etc, with an ideological debate
around 'who is a real Zimbabwean-? This has acted to
exclude urban, white, farmworker, professional etc Zimbabweans through
denial of their legitimacy as citizens. The battleground is not
just economic and political but also ideological through identity,
exclusion and exclusion questions and demonisation of non-ZANU supporters,
ruralisation/ totems etc.
For now Zimbabweans
need the greatest international solidarity and pressure on regional
governments. The UN Security Council should also be a forum for
laying open the human rights abuses which are likely to get worse
in the days and weeks ahead.
*Sam Kabele
is a human rights activist.
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