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Where
do we go from here?
R.W. Johnson, London Review of Books
May 08, 2008
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v30/n09/john01_.html
The sequence
of events that produced the current deadlock in Zimbabwe began on
11
March last year when Morgan Tsvangirai and a number of other
members of the Movement for Democratic Change were arrested, tortured
and beaten. Robert Mugabe had banned all MDC meetings and rallies
in the hope of suppressing the MDC completely before this year-s
elections. The local churches entered the fray and organised a prayer
meeting in Highfield, a suburb of Harare. Tsvangirai drove to the
meeting, but found that the area had been cordoned off by riot police
and the meeting closed down on presidential orders. Informed a little
later that a large number of civic leaders and MDC activists had
been arrested and were being held at Machipisa police station in
Highfield, he drove there straightaway. As soon as he arrived, he
was pulled from his car and his head repeatedly slammed against
the wall by police. Inside, the police used rifle butts, army belts,
whips and sjamboks. 'They were mostly targeting my head and
my face,- Tsvangirai recalled. He passed out three times and
was revived with buckets of cold water so that the beatings could
continue, the most determined assailant being a woman with an army
belt.
The pictures of Tsvangirai
as he emerged several days later from hospital, his face so swollen
that he couldn-t see, went round the world. He had had a fractured
skull and needed several transfusions. One of his bodyguards, who
had been beaten along with him, later died of his injuries; another
MDC activist was shot dead; scores more were tortured and beaten.
But it was the TV footage of Tsvangirai, smuggled out of the country,
that elicited international protest so vociferous that even Thabo
Mbeki, Mugabe-s most loyal supporter, politely asked, through
his deputy foreign minister, Aziz Pahad, that the Zimbabwean government
'ensure that the rule of law including respect for rights
of all Zimbabweans and leaders of various political parties is respected-.
Mugabe realised the harm the footage had done and tracked down the
cameraman who had taken the pictures, Edward Chikombo. His body
was discovered some days later.
These events
brought about a change in tactics by Mugabe and Mbeki. Mbeki-s
fundamental position was that, as a fellow national liberation movement
(NLM), Mugabe-s ruling Zanu-PF had to be maintained in power
at all costs. According to this theory, the NLMs of southern Africa
are those movements which used armed struggle to overthrow white
rule - that is, the ruling parties of Angola, Mozambique,
Namibia, Zimbabwe and South Africa. In Mbeki-s and Mugabe-s
minds Western imperialism is engaged in a struggle to overthrow
the NLMs and restore, if it can, the preceding regimes - apartheid,
colonialism or white settler rule. In so doing it will use various
local parties as lackeys: Inkatha and the Democratic Alliance in
South Africa, Renamo in Mozambique, Unita in Angola - and
the MDC in Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is the weakest link here, which means
that the other NLMs must defend Zanu-PF to the death, for if Zimbabwe
'falls- South Africa will be the next target.
Ever since the Zimbabwe crisis first erupted in 2000, Mbeki had
seen it as his role to support Mugabe (while insisting that he was
using 'quiet diplomacy- to solve the problem) and give
him time to carry through his land revolution (i.e. to get rid of
the white farmers), extirpate the imperialist lackeys of the MDC,
and restabilise his country, with Zanu-PF then regaining its de
facto position of unchallenged single party in a re-equilibrated
Zimbabwe. The problem was that Mugabe had damaged his economy beyond
repair by getting rid of more than 90 per cent of the white farmers.
Decline continued rapidly and the MDC, despite endless persecution,
refused to disappear. The reaction that followed last year-s
attempt to make them do so shook the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), most of whose member states are not ruled by NLMs,
do not share the paranoid imaginings of Mugabe and Mbeki about the
reimposition of white/colonial rule, and are in any case heavily
dependent on Western aid. SADC has adopted a code of conduct, fully
up to Westminster standards, which is supposed to apply to all elections
within SADC, and Western donors (who finance much of SADC-s
affairs as well as those of its constituent states) wanted to see
it observed. SADC, though normally deferential to South Africa,
the regional great power, was now pushed by its Western donors,
as well as by some among its own ranks, to work towards a mediated
resolution to the Zimbabwe crisis, with no more flare-ups of state
terrorism. Mbeki was, accordingly, appointed as mediator.
Mbeki led the
SADC team in long negotiations
which eventually produced a new Zimbabwean constitution,
a new Electoral
Act and amendments to the Public
Order Act. The number of parliamentary seats was increased from
120 to 210, the president-s right to name 30 extra MPs was
abolished, and it was determined that to win the presidential election
a candidate must get at least 50 per cent of the votes in the first
round or, failing that, face a run-off within 21 days. SADC emphasised
that they did not wish to be embarrassed again by the state-sponsored
violence that had marred previous Zimbabwean elections and Mugabe
agreed to allow in election observers - but only from SADC
and other friendly states thought likely to sign off on a Mugabe
victory as 'free, fair and credible-.
In effect, this new dispensation
represented a deal between Mbeki and Mugabe that was supposed to
see Zanu-PF returned to power, though by more genteel means. Mbeki,
who is concerned that Zanu-PF rule has become too identified with
Mugabe, wanted the 84-year-old to stand down in favour of a younger
moderniser, Simba Makoni. When Mugabe refused, Makoni, with Mbeki-s
tacit support, ran as a dissident Zanu-PF candidate, hoping to split
the vote sufficiently to make it through in the second round.
But on one thing Mbeki
and Mugabe were agreed: Tsvangirai and the MDC must not be allowed
to win. And they were confident that the new arrangements were sufficiently
loaded against the MDC to guarantee that. 'Sure, they thought
Mugabe would win and SADC would be quite happy with that,-
Willias Mudzimure, an MDC MP for Harare, told me when I was there
for the election. 'They had seen how Mugabe had the rural
vote locked up solid and the idea was that by increasing the number
of parliamentary seats, there would be a large increase in the number
of rural seats, all of which Mugabe would win. And because there-s
been such a reign of terror in those rural areas in past elections,
frankly we often couldn-t get good candidates to stand for
us there - people were just too scared.-
The prospects were good. The MDC would, as in the past, be barred
from all state-owned media, including radio and TV. With the only
MDC-supporting newspaper, the Daily News, suppressed and its presses
blown up, the MDC would be at a huge disadvantage in getting its
message across. Besides, the MDC had split and the two rival movements
were running against each other: one an essentially Ndebele party,
with support in rural Matabeleland, the other Tsvangirai-s
majority faction. This was bound to be a major handicap for the
opposition, now so conscious of its problems that it was frantically
appealing for the election to be postponed for three months.
The state had complete
control of the electoral register - large numbers of dead
and fictitious voters were registered to vote - and the MDC
was denied any access to it. This was enough for Mugabe and Mbeki
to feel that a Zanu-PF victory could be guaranteed even in a peaceful
election, though, leaving nothing to doubt, Mugabe decreed at the
last moment that policemen could be allowed inside the polling stations
to 'assist- voters. It was all so outrageously one-sided
that when election day closed some of the SADC observers could be
seen vigorously shaking their heads even as their mission head gave
his blessing to it all.
But the best-laid plans
. . . It is unlikely that Mbeki paid attention to the detail of
the administrative changes made by his SADC underlings, but a few
of these were crucial. One was an amendment to the Public Order
Act which removed the need to get police permission to hold private
meetings. In the past the police had used their powers to prevent
MDC leaders from meeting local activists but now these meetings
were classified as private, which made it much easier for the MDC
to organise on the ground. This was particularly important in rural
areas in hitherto safe Zanu-PF territory, where the Tsvangirai forces
staged huge rallies and ultimately won many seats.
Willias Mudzimure told
me that in the rural areas two factors had been crucial. 'Mugabe-s
land reform has been a catastrophe, so he couldn-t talk about
that. Moreover, when he tried to win votes by giving out tractors
and farm implements these just went to the fat cats who now have
the land. People were saying: "Is that the meaning of independence,
that these people must now eat for us?" So he fell back into
talking about the 1970s war against Ian Smith. This meant nothing
at all to young people and it addressed none of today-s problems.-
Second, in past elections Zanu-PF had distributed food and seeds
to those with a Zanu-PF card: if you didn-t vote Zanu-PF you
didn-t eat. 'But now everyone has a party card and there-s
still no food because the state simply has no more resources.-
And when Mugabe tried to blame Britain and sanctions for this, 'people
would say, you-ve said that before but what are you doing
about it? They were in no mood for more excuses.-
Moreover, Zanu-PF
was clearly destabilised by Simba Makoni-s campaign. To hear
a senior Zanu-PF figure admit that none of what Mugabe said about
the harm done by Britain and targeted sanctions was true, and that
the dire economic situation was entirely Mugabe-s own fault,
was deeply disillusioning for the party faithful. Normally the combination
of violence and ballot-stuffing has meant that the campaign didn-t
matter: this election was different. Ultimately, allowing a peaceful
campaign in the rural areas completely undid the assumption that
those areas were 'safe- Zanu-PF territory.
What no one seems to have noticed was that SADC-s drafters
had inserted into the new Electoral Act Section 64(1)E, requiring
all votes to be counted at the polling station where they were cast
and the results, witnessed by the party agents, to be posted publicly
on a V11 form outside the station. This gave the opposition a virtually
foolproof way of detecting and preventing cheating, and MDC election
agents were instructed to photograph the V11 forms to provide cast-iron
proof of each polling-station result. Nobody doubts that without
this provision the election would have been stolen in the usual
way. But neither Mbeki nor Mugabe has any experience of free competitive
elections and, initially, they simply missed the significance of
the new requirement.
Some eighteen hours after
the polls closed the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) gave the
Zanu-PF Politburo its first private prediction of the presidential
result: Tsvangirai 58 per cent, Mugabe 27 per cent and Makoni 15
per cent. In fact these estimates were based on too narrow an urban
sample and were too favourable both to Tsvangirai and Makoni, but
the message was clear: Mugabe had lost. Enraged, he ordered the
ZEC to declare him elected with 53 per cent. He was also angry at
Makoni-s 'treachery- and demanded that his vote
be reduced to 5 per cent. This produced resistance both from the
ZEC and from the army, police and intelligence chiefs. The ZEC objected
that manipulation of the results on such a massive scale would be
too obvious, while the security chiefs were concerned that the country
might become ungovernable if the popular will was so blatantly flouted.
At this stage Mbeki,
continuously on the phone from Pretoria and with his own emissaries
in Harare, intervened. Could not the results be 'adjusted-
so that Tsvangirai was brought back under the 50 per cent mark,
while Mugabe got 41 per cent and Makoni 10-12 per cent? With no
candidate getting more than 50 per cent there would have to be a
run-off; Mugabe would then withdraw, leaving Zanu-PF to rally behind
Makoni and, provided the security forces were given a strong role
in the way the run-off was conducted, Makoni could be given just
over 50 per cent and Tsvangirai kept out. This was acceptable to
all parties except Mugabe, who again refused to stand down. Dismay
and indecision followed - and serious discussion of a military
coup. In the end that idea was discarded for fear that it might
tempt a British military intervention. The interesting thing is
that on the day after the election, key Mugabe supporters -
including his cousin Perence Shiri - concluded that Mugabe
could no longer save himself, despite his furious avowals, only
the week before, that he would 'die in State House-
and that 'Morgan Tsvangirai will never rule Zimbabwe.-
Not long before he died, the former Rhodesian premier Ian Smith
said that he hoped to live to see Mugabe-s funeral. He didn-t.
But now even Mugabe-s closest supporters were conscious that
the old man was mortal.
Meanwhile the parliamentary
results dribbled out, disguising for as long as possible the fact
that the opposition had won 111 seats to Zanu-PF-s 96 (with
three seats - all safe MDC - vacant). There were discussions
about Tsvangirai heading a government of national unity that would
include some Zanu-PF ministers and grant complete amnesty to Mugabe
and his henchmen, but the real struggle was going on inside Zanu-PF
and the armed forces. It was a desperate time to be trying to write
about the crisis since there was rising euphoria but no news. One
heard that Mugabe-s family had flown out to Malaysia. But
the guards outside State House were still there with their bayoneted
automatic rifles. In the end I decided there were other ways of
checking. Some discreet inquiries revealed that the Mugabe supporter
and 'self-styled emissary of Beelzebub-, as one British
judge described him, Nicholas van Hoogstraten, had left the country
on election night. One had to assume he knew something. I drove
along Churchill Avenue, past Normandy and Arundel Roads and Dunkirk
Drive - echoes of Ian Smith-s Rhodesia - and stopped
outside a house guarded by a soldier with a rifle. The house belonged
to the former Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam, convicted
in absentia of genocide but shielded for many years now by Mugabe.
The soldier advanced threateningly. I said I-d come to see
Mr Mengistu. 'He is not in.- I asked if he-d gone
away and was told that he had and that, like Titus Oates, he 'might
be away some time-. Mengistu-s alternative choice of
exile is probably North Korea. So, if he-d done a runner,
Mugabe really was in trouble.
It was not until the
Thursday after the vote that we got the picture. Perhaps foolishly,
I had that morning sallied into MDC headquarters at Harvest House
in central Harare, a place watched by the security police and frequently
raided by them. Failing to find Tsvangirai, I sat around making
a nuisance of myself until I was slapped on the back by a bevy of
MDC MPs from Bulawayo whom I knew. They-d arrived for their
caucus meeting only to discover - the usual MDC shambles -
that the meeting had started five minutes before, 12 miles away,
and that there was no transport to take them there. I put my car
at their disposal and we happily drove there together. I then went
to Meikles Hotel to hear the MDC-s press conference. The lounge
there is always abuzz with journalists, but I don-t like it.
It-s full of spies and electronic surveillance, so I left
quickly and went back to the lodge where I was staying.
That was the day, it
turned out, that Mugabe finally reasserted control: the crackdown
began. A few minutes after I-d left Harvest House the riot
police raided it, smashing things up as usual and arresting anyone
remotely like me. Then, not long after I-d left Meikles, the
police surrounded the place and arrested the journos they found
inside. Finally, that night, 30 armed police arrived at the lodge
where I was staying. They had caught some journalists at a neighbouring
lodge and arrested the owner. He, poor man, was sitting on the back
of an open lorry, being taken away God knows where, his lodge now
shut down for the newly invented crime of harbouring journalists.
I was lucky enough to bluff my way through this visitation. After
the police had gone I poured myself a large drink, reflecting that
three close shaves in a single day meant I was pushing my luck.
But the story was now quite clear. Mugabe would do whatever it took
to stay in power.
Which is what has happened:
ZEC officials arrested, appeals to overturn the parliamentary results,
a presidential recount even before the first count has been released,
and a new campaign of violence against anyone suspected of not having
voted for Mugabe. In other words, Mugabe has rejected Mbeki-s
new softly-softly approach and we-re back to ballot-stuffing
and terror. Mbeki has, of course, tried frantically to cover for
Mugabe. ('There is no crisis in Zimbabwe,- he told journalists
after an hour-s talk with Mugabe. He was, as he spoke, holding
hands with Mugabe.) Even within South Africa there has been ridicule
and protest. Mbeki-s credibility is threadbare.
Where do we go from here
? In two directions. First, by June inflation in Zimbabwe will reach
500,000 per cent. All normal life will become impossible sometime
before then. Mugabe-s rule can continue so long as there are
well-armed and well-paid men willing to protect him, but we are
now close to the Papa Doc model and rule by the Tonton Macoute.
Mugabe has suffered a huge blow to his legitimacy both domestically
and internationally and clings on only by brute force. Even Mbeki
and SADC can-t really pretend otherwise.
Second, Mbeki-s
great rival, Jacob Zuma, has picked up the issue and adopted a more
critical attitude towards Mugabe. Zuma could be president of South
Africa in a year-s time and there is a good chance that he
will pull the rug from under Mugabe. One way or the other, the end
game in Zimbabwe could be near. Whether it will be accompanied by
a final paroxysm of terror as Mugabe realises he is cornered is
an open question. Mbeki, having been heavily voted down by the ANC
at its Polokwane conference in December, is also cornered. He and
Mugabe clearly live in a paranoid world all of their own. There-s
no knowing what they might attempt before the final Götterdämmerung.
Perhaps the most important
thing about the election was that, because Mbeki and Mugabe had
miscalculated so spectacularly, Zanu-PF was caught off-guard and
for several days there was complete uncertainty. That period provided
an aperture through which Zimbabweans could glimpse an alternative
future - and many did. It was clear that, with a new democratic
government, there would be immediate British and American help,
quickly followed by the EU, the World Bank and IMF, with the emphasis
on food aid and the restabilisation of the currency. One consequence
would be that Zimbabwe would cease to be a client state of South
Africa and instead become more generally dependent on developed
country donors and investors. Doubtless, Mbeki and Mugabe would
see this as a victory for neocolonialism, though one is bound to
say that even if the prospect was described in those terms, ordinary
Zimbabweans would happily vote for it. And, in no time at all, as
the Zimbabwean economy revived, South African companies of every
kind would move in.
This merely highlights
the absurdity of the Mbeki-Mugabe theory. To be sure, for many years
their parties took an orthodox Marxist-Leninist line and aimed to
set up people-s republics in their liberated states, replete
with Soviet and Chinese advisers. Had this occurred and the Cold
War continued, then doubtless it would have been correct to see
the major Western powers as intrinsically hostile to these new Cubas-in-Africa.
But nothing of the sort happened. Not just Zimbabwe and South Africa
but all the other states ruled by NLMs have retained mainly capitalist
economies, and everywhere a new black middle class is attempting
to establish itself. Indeed, the intransigence of the Zanu-PF leadership
derives essentially from the fact that it has used state power to
enrich itself and is determined to hang onto its enormous gains.
When such an elite feels
its power threatened, it tends to fall back on its original self-definition
as a national liberation movement. If one posits the problem in
those terms then it follows that the defeat of an NLM can only mean
the triumph of the forces of colonialism and apartheid which it
came into existence to fight. In that view national liberation,
once achieved, is the end of history. There can never be a point
when it would be desirable for the gains of liberation to be lost,
so the theory provides a watertight rationale - and a legitimating
self-righteousness - for the ANC, Zanu-PF and the region-s
other ruling NLMs to cling to power indefinitely. Seen this way
the drama of Zimbabwe may indeed prefigure a more general crisis
as these movements age and decay. We have seen enough of movements
that believe they will remain to see the state wither away or to
usher in a thousand-year Reich to know that bringing them to accept
a less intransigent view of themselves is seldom a gentle business.
*R.W. Johnson, an emeritus fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford,
lives in Cape Town, where he is completing a book on South Africa
since the advent of democracy.
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