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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Outrage
and consequence in the twilight of a tyrant
Allister Sparks, Business Day
April 30, 2008
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/opinion.aspx?ID=BD4A758766
At last we may be witnessing
the final chapter of Zimbabwe-s drawn-out agony. At the time
of writing, the final election results have still to be announced,
but it looks as though Robert Mugabe is on his way out. I know this
has been predicted before, only for some new twist to see hopes
evaporate. This Götterdämmerung opera will not be over
until the Old Man sings. But this time things look different.
The Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission-s (ZEC-s) sudden acceleration of its recount
of those 23 disputed parliamentary seats, after a full month of
stalling, and its confirmation that the figures were correct after
all and the reunited Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) had indeed
won control of Parliament, smelt of a deal having been done behind
the scenes.
It suggested that the
old regime had capitulated. Even if Mugabe were able to rig a run-off
election, he would face the difficult task of trying to govern with
a hostile legislature. Not impossible but tortuous. It would mean
ruling by presidential decree, effectively declaring himself a dictator,
which not even the timid Southern African Development Community
(SADC) would be able to condone.
What brought about this
sudden capitulation? One can only speculate, but the surge of public
disapproval throughout the region, and particularly in SA, has undoubtedly
played a role. As long as the disapproval came only from the "imperialist"
west, Mugabe could brush it aside. But the surge of outrage in his
own backyard shook him and opened cracks in the Zanu (PF) leadership.
There have been telltale
signs of this along the way. Ten days ago City Press newspaper published
a question-and-answer interview with Morgan Tsvangirai in which
it managed to bury an item of singular newsworthiness at the tail
end of a 2000-word report.
In what should have been
its front-page lead, the paper quoted Tsvangirai as saying he knew
on the Sunday following the March 29 election that the MDC had won,
and that the next day an emissary from Mugabe-s ruling Zanu
(PF) came to see him.
"On Monday they
sent an emissary to say we have been trying to persuade Mugabe to
concede," Tsvangirai said. "Mugabe has accepted, now
the question is how can you accommodate us? They even suggested,
why don-t you give Mugabe a role for six months? We said:
'No. He should go and retire.-"
Asked by the City Press
reporters what went wrong, Tsvangirai replied: "I think what
went wrong is this: some of the hawks in the military said we can-t
accept transfer of power and that-s when the problem started.
The hawks in the military, the hawks in Zanu (PF), were not prepared
to accept the verdict of the people. I think they regrouped and
went to Mugabe, and Mugabe, being a hawk himself, found a constituency."
I have managed to substantiate
independently that this is indeed what happened that Monday, three
days after the election.
It changed the whole
strategic picture. It meant the central problem was no longer Mugabe
himself, but the military commanders.
The reason is clear.
The SADC leaders and Tsvangirai himself had pledged publicly to
give Mugabe "an honourable exit" with immunity from
prosecution for crimes against humanity. But no such assurances
were given to the six commanders of the security services —
the chiefs of the defence force, the army, the air force, the commissioners
of police and prison services and the head of the National Intelligence
Organisation, who together form the powerful Joint Operational Command
(JOC), the power behind Mugabe-s throne.
Two are particularly
vulnerable: Air Marshal Perence Shiri, who commanded the notorious
North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade, which massacred some 20000 people
in Matabeleland in a repressive campaign ordered by Mugabe in the
early 1980s, and defence force chief Constantine Chiwenga, who has
been involved in more recent atrocities.
These men have every
reason to fear a change of regime and the departure of their protector.
One can imagine them feeling aggrieved at Mugabe-s willingness
to step down into safe retirement while leaving them to face the
music.
This meant the strategic
focus needed to switch to them. If the Zimbabwean crisis was ever
to be resolved, there would have to be a deal with the JOC chiefs.
I suspect this is what
has engaged the mediators, whose resolve appears to have been strengthened
by the intervention of the American Assistant Secretary of State
for Africa, Jendayi Fraser, who has been doing some not-so-quiet
diplomacy of her own as she has shuttled around the SADC region.
Ironically, Mugabe-s
cynical attempt to buy time to deploy his forces so he could win
a rerun while beating his opponents into submission has allowed
time for behind-the-scenes negotiations to deal with the problem
of the military commanders.
Just how this is being
handled is not yet clear. But it should have been obvious from the
outset that it was an issue that required the closest attention
— that a way would have to be found to grant the JOC chiefs
immunity from prosecution in return for their retirement from the
armed forces — which in any case would have to be depoliticised
if Zimbabwe was to stand a chance of being reconstructed.
The other side of such
a deal may well be to persuade Tsvangirai to agree to form a government
of national unity — without Mugabe, but including several
Zanu (PF) ministers. As we South Africans know from our own experience,
including members of the old regime, however odious, in the new
administration is vital if one is to achieve a measure of national
reconciliation.
Finally, it must be said
that Jacob Zuma-s outspokenness and that of his Congress of
South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) allies have played an important
role in stepping up the pressure on the Mugabe regime.
Zuma has been forceful,
calling the crisis "a sabotage of democracy" and describing
Zimbabwe as "a police state". Coming with the full backing
of the African National Congress (ANC), Zuma-s admonitions
have not only helped clear the suspicion that we South Africans
have been secret supporters of Mugabe-s misrule, but his strong
leadership has opened space for others in the ruling alliance to
become more assertive.
Thus Cosatu-s Zwelinzima
Vavi has accused Mugabe of waging war on his people and of staging
a coup d-etat. Vavi has denounced the regime as "illegal"
and called on labor movements and governments worldwide to make
it clear that "this regime cannot be tolerated in Africa".
Strong stuff, contrasting
sharply with President Thabo Mbeki-s quiet diplomacy. And
the words have been backed by action. We have seen the Cosatu-backed
Transport and General Workers Union, with civil society activists,
turn away the shipment of Chinese arms intended for Zimbabwe.
That was a watershed
event, which sent a strong message to Mugabe and his military chiefs.
It told them in no uncertain terms that their powerful southern
neighbour was strongly critical of their oppressive rule, and warned
that the new ANC leadership would take a much tougher line if they
were still there when it comes to power next year.
It-s that kind
of pressure that causes tyrants to waver and cracks to appear in
their ranks.
*Sparks
writes for a number of South African newspapers.
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