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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
The
complexities of Zimbabwe
Chido Makunike, Pambazuka News
May 02, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/47799
Chido Makunike looks
at the various competing interests in Zimbabwe, the MDC, ZANU PF,
Mugabe and the West in relation to what the Zimbabwean are hoping
to get out of democracy.
A month after Zimbabwe-s
March 29 elections, the winner of the presidential poll remains
unknown. The delay adds considerable additional complexity to the
many undercurrents of the country-s problems.
By virtue of the suspicious,
poorly explained delay in announcing who won the presidential poll,
the authorities in Harare have ensured that the only outcome that
will be widely believed by a skeptical world would be one in which
main opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai emerged the winner. Any
other result would be widely dismissed as "fixed" by
the authorities to produce a favourable outcome for President Robert
Mugabe in the time since the election.
Even a close result requiring
a run-off election between Mugabe and Tsvangirai would be seen by
many as engineered to give the ruling party a second chance to mobilize
the state machinery to do whatever it took to ensure the "right"
result for him. The results delay and whatever other gambits the
authorities are likely to serve up arguably can no longer serve
to impart even the veneer of electoral legitimacy on Mugabe.
It would be one of many
recent defeats in which Mugabe resorts to out rightly thwarting
the electoral will of the people. But he does nevertheless need
a façade of democracy. He has often responded to his Western
criticism by saying they have no authority to chide him on the basis
of his democratic credentials. "We brought democracy at independence
in spite of Western support for the racist, anti-democratic government
we replaced" has been his argument. He points out that by
the measure of regularly held elections, Zimbabwe is far more democratic
than many other countries that are in much better books with the
Western world than it is.
Mugabe makes this point
to bolster his argument that Western opposition to him is not because
of any concern for the welfare of Zimbabweans, but is due to his
stinging criticism of the double standards of the West, as well
as his refusal to be compliant with Western expectations of how
an African leader should conduct himself. It is precisely Mugabe-s
fearlessly expressed, hard-to-fault arguments about the West-s
relations with the rest of the world that makes him such a hero
to many in Africa and beyond, even as Zimbabweans have suffered
steep economic decline and increasing repression at home.
If the veneer of democratic
legitimacy such as that imparted by regularly scheduled elections,
no matter how flawed, has always been so important to Mugabe, why
would he seem to risk throwing it all away now? Whatever the presidential
results will show when released, the opposition MDC-s unprecedented
win of a majority in the concurrently held parliamentary election
is a convincing indication of the level of disaffection with the
rule of Mugabe-s ZANU-PF. His actions since March 29 do not
at all suggest a man who respects the right of the voters to choose
their leaders.
For the three election
cycles up to the mid 1990s, Mugabe-s desire for the perception
of a strict adherence to at least the forms of electoral democracy,
if not the substance, was relatively easy to achieve. Independence-era
euphoria and "gratitude" may have been lifting with
every election, but until about then, Mugabe could count on genuine
popularity to make his party-s re-elections a foregone conclusion.
Mugabe has now shown that his dedication to those electoral forms
is not quite so strong after all, now that the evidence suggests
a likely majority of the electorate want him gone.
Merely conducting an
election cannot bestow democratic legitimacy when it is clear that
the only results that will be respected are those in which the incumbent
wins. By so awkwardly making this obvious, Mugabe-s government
has trapped itself into the equally unhealthy situation in which
much of the Zimbabwean electorate and the world would now only believe
a result which showed Mugabe losing. This has made "the Zimbabwe
crisis" take on a dimension far beyond what can be resolved
by the much anticipated release of the results of the presidential
poll.
The desire to hold on
to power and privilege, and fear of prosecution for past crimes
are the usually discussed reasons for Mugabe and ZANU-PF conducting
themselves with so little dignity in the face of evidence of an
electorate earthquake of rejection against them. But genuine revulsion
at what Tsvangirai and the MDC are perceived to represent is no
doubt also part of the intransigence of Mugabe & Company in
conceding defeat.
There is a self-serving
element to Mugabe-s painting of the MDC as stooges of the
West who are bent on reversing the efforts to have Zimbabwe-s
political independence also have economic teeth for its citizens.
Yet Tsvangirai and the MDC have ineptly only fuelled these suspicions
in their words and deeds over the years. Mugabe and ZANU-PF in turn
have largely failed to convince a majority of Zimbabweans that the
claimed slavishness of the MDC to their Western backers is the reason
their country is in such poor shape. Mugabe & Co. may genuinely
worry that Tsvangirai and the MDC wish to "sell out"
the country to the West and "reverse the gains of the revolution"
by restoring the economic dominance of whites in commercial agriculture
and other sectors of the economy.
But if so, electoral
democracy required that Mugabe sell that message to the electorate
more convincingly than the MDC-s pitch much needed change
and renewal. The MDC has arguably won that battle for the hearts
and minds of Zimbabweans, helped considerably by the country-s
desperate economic state under Mugabe.
Instead of accepting
his failure to sell his message of "Things are bad because
we are besieged by powerful external foes, stick with me while I
work out a plan to thwart them and improve things," Mugabe
has instead arrogantly chosen to accuse the electorate of not fully
understanding what is at stake. His stance is essentially that the
electorate are mistaken to buy the Tsvangirai-s message and
reject his. And if he can get away with it, he seems inclined to
"correct" the misguided electorate by hanging on in
power regardless of the popular will!
Yet the price one must
pay for accepting a system of electoral democracy is to respect
the will of the people even if one believes that will to be wrong.
You then revert to opposition, sharpening your message for the next
election. The current impasse is partly because of the refusal of
Mugabe & Co. to respect this rule of the game because for the
first time its result has been unfavourable to them.
The MDC had begun to
make inroads into reversing the suspicion with which it was regarded
in many African capitals by a belated diplomatic outreach to them.
Those efforts have in recent weeks become compromised again by the
over-the- top eagerness of the Western political establishment and
media to take sides in the Zimbabwean election. In the days leading
up to the election, and since then, the Western political and media
establishment abandoned all pretence of merely being onlookers who
were just interested in seeing that Zimbabweans were able to freely
exercise their vote. Zimbabwe-s economic, political and humanitarian
problems are severe enough, but the Western media, particularly
that of ex-colonial master Britain, went into an absolute frenzy
to depict the country as a virtual war zone.
Whether or not it was
a coordinated campaign to give the Mugabe a decisive final push
out of power, in their shrillness the Western political and media
establishment only served to give credence to Mugabe-s long-held
claim of a Western conspiracy to depose him for not being pliable
in the mould of most African leaders. Britain had kept a relative
distance in the months leading up to the election, correctly fearing
that any unusual interest would be used by Mugabe as proof of its
dishonourable neo-colonialist intentions. But at the time of the
election and immediately after, Britain seemed to smell Mugabe-s
blood and lost all self-restraint in the excitement of the prospect
of seeing its old nemesis gone. It was almost as if Britain were
so certain of Mugabe being deposed that it no long felt the need
to maintain the façade of being a neutral observer.
Western shrillness has
only grown since the election, with the Zimbabwean authorities also
feeding it by the astonishing games over the election results, as
well as the jailing of some Western journalists for slipping into
the country to report on the election without getting accreditation
- under the country-s tight media laws. But the effect of
all this has been to justify the paranoia of the Zimbabwean authorities
about a claimed coordinated Western "regime change"
agenda.
Such an agenda could
not justify the flouting of the popular electoral will, but it is
not much of a stretch to guess that the unseemly eagerness of the
West to interfere in and influence the election against him would
only have made Mugabe and his whole political machinery feel inclined
to dig in even in defiance of the voters. It is therefore quite
plausible to speculate that the Western eagerness to "help"
the MDC ensure Mugabe-s exit may in the short term have done
the exact opposite.
In the immediate term
the desire of the West to see the back of a troublesome-to-them-Mugabe
probably overlaps with the wishes of many Zimbabweans who put the
blame for the political repression and economic hardships in their
country squarely at Mugabe-s door. But it is not at all certain
that those similar desires perfectly coincide. Neither Britain nor
the US have an honourable history in regards to Zimbabwe, so their
posing as great champions of democracy and defenders of its peoples-
best interests have a hollow ring.
Mugabe has indeed degenerated
into a despot who has refused to accept any responsibility for his
country-s mess. But he is no worse a ruler than many others
who dare not point out the West-s double standards and who
are quite happy to have their countries be client states in return
for being absolved of scrutiny over their governance records. Therefore
the West and the Zimbabwean citizenry want a change from Mugabe
for likely very different reasons.
If Mugabe somehow survives
the electoral and diplomatic onslaughts against him and hangs on
for several more years, the ill-advised Western intervention on
behalf of the MDC would provide him considerable ammunition against
the opposition party. This may make little difference to the voters-
feelings towards him if economic decline and hardship continue,
as is likely to be the case in a situation where the Western world
would be even more resolute in closing doors to Mugabe-s government.
Yet if Mugabe were able to stem the slide, say by paying serious
attention to improved agricultural productivity, he might well be
able to say "you saw how the Westerners behaved during the
2008 election; their conspiracy against me was not a figment of
my imagination."
With the economy continuing
on its present slide, few outside his immediate circle and the die-hards
in his party would listen to this argument. But with even modest
stabilization, his idea of radical land redistribution remains popular
enough amongst even his opponents that the argument could gain political
currency to his benefit and at the expense of the MDC.
Even if Tsvangirai and
the MDC assume office, their doing so with such open support for
it as the West has shown will be a double edged sword. If the expected
massive Western financial support flows in a way that quickly results
in a stabilization of the economy that is widely felt at the grassroots,
the whiff of the suspicion of the MDC having agreed to be "stooges"
in return for Western support would be neutralised, at least in
the short term. The need for a return to economic stability is probably
the one issue that unites people across the country-s criss-crossing
political divides.
But in the absence of
either quick or widely-felt economic recovery, the tag of "Western
stooge" around the necks of Tsvangirai and the MDC could remain
a potent political weapon in the hands of a ZANU-PF that no longer
dominates parliament, but nevertheless has only a handful fewer
seats than the MDC. This assumes that ZANU-PF adjusts to being a
minority party without disintegrating, which in turn also depends
on how successfully they can choose a leader to fill Mugabe-s
very large shoes. Without dramatic economic recovery, ZANU-PF in
opposition could remain a formidable thorn in an MDC government-s
flesh, with its Western backing becoming more of an albatross to
it than a blessing.
Having won a majority,
the MDC has not spent much time contesting the legitimacy of the
parliamentary results. If they are considered to be a true reflection
of the electoral will, it is astonishing that the ruling ZANU-PF
did as well as it did, winning almost half of the popular vote and
the number of parliamentary seats. With the rate of inflation said
to be close to 200,000% and virtually every other economic index
being strongly negative, one would have expected the ruling party
to have been electorally wiped out.
Herein lie some of the
nuances of the Zimbabwean crisis that much of the media we are exposed
to is either oblivious of or simply not interested in relating.
Mugabe has increasingly become repressive, he has been a brilliant
ideologue but a very poor manager and he has simply stayed in power
longer than was advisable for his own legacy. But his broad message
of an unapologetic, assertively expressed desire for African empowerment
retains its appeal and has led to a sea change in how black Zimbabweans
think about what their independence should mean.
To say many and probably
most Zimbabweans want Mugabe to step aside is not the same as saying
his ideas have been largely rejected by them. For example, most
would want his flawed land reform effort to be fixed to work, not
for it to be reversed. The MDC was slow to understand this and other
nuances of Mugabe-s complex legacy, losing it precious time
and early support in Zimbabwe and elsewhere.
Now the opposition party
is careful to say it would not return land to its previous white
occupiers, but would make sure it was productively used by the new
black landholders. It remains to be seen if the MDC-s Western
backers understand these nuances and would let it negotiate the
minefield of balancing the need for reviving the economy with the
political imperative of a strong desire for African empowerment
that will remain one of Mugabe-s strongest legacies despite
his failure to translate that desire into concrete, practical reality.
There has been talk of
a Kenya-like 'government of national unity.- Both sides
naturally posture against it. It may still be emerge as the immediate
way out of the present crisis. But as in Kenya, such a compromise
solution robs whoever the winner is of the spoils of electoral victory.
When the game is played, all the participants are fully aware that
they could lose by a mere handful of votes.
Whether in Kenya or Zimbabwe,
another potential flaw of a GNU is to rob the electorate of two
or more competing visions of how their country should be ruled.
It may avoid conflict in the short term, but it also effectively
allows political parties to put aside their competition for power
because the GNU allows all of them a chance at the feeding trough.
There is also the potential of them collectively ganging up against
the citizens they usually claim are their whole reason for being.
Resolving the current
impasse is undoubtedly the most urgent order of business in Zimbabwe.
But the country-s tortured and violent history, the cynical
external interests seeking to exert their influence for their own
ends, the huge ideological gulf between the two main political parties
and the closeness of the results announced so far suggest that whichever
way the immediate crisis is resolved, there are long term difficulties
ahead in getting Zimbabwe back on the track of political stability,
psychic healing and economic growth.
*Chido Makunike is a Zimbabwean social and political commentator.
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