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Zimbabwe:
where to now?
Tendai Biti, Mail & Guardian (SA)
May 22, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articledirect.aspx?articleid=339676&area=%2finsight%2finsight__comment_and_analysis%2f
Zimbabwe is on path of
renewal. On March 29 the baby was conceived. The birth pains and
the labour might be arduous, but we are absolutely certain that
the baby will be delivered.
To anticipate the future
we need to understand the past. The Zimbabwe crisis is inextricably
linked to the nature of the post-colonial state. In 1980 Robert
Mugabe inherited a state that was not designed to be democratic
or liberal. It was no different from the preceding colonial one:
a militarized and privatized state controlled by and serving the
interest of the few. Elections (in 2002, 2005 and 2008) were nominal
exercises designed to put a veneer of legitimacy on a fundamentally
undemocratic construction. Transfer of power was not on the agenda.
The purpose was merely to generate international recognition. This
cycle ended on the March 29. Now, for the first time, Zanu-PF faces
the real prospect of losing power.
The crisis in Zimbabwe
is presided over by people who are physically exhausted and pursuing
an out-dated ideology of nationalism. At the same time asset-stripping
and major illegal transactions are taking place. Incidentally corporates
doing business with Mugabe should know that they are dealing with
an illegal regime, the mandate of which expired on March 28, with
no substantive rights to negotiate contracts.
Zanu-PF successfully
dealt with the historical issues of colonization, but its ideologies
were not designed to meet the intricacies of a modern democratic
state.
Nor did it succeed in
democratizing itself as a political party.
In essence the struggle
in Zimbabwe is not a struggle between the Movement for Democratic
Change and Zanu-PF.
It is a generational
struggle between tired nationalists and those who prioritize the
completion of nationalism-s unfinished business: democratization.
A pursuit of democracy
that does not undermine the nationalist issues of land or social
justice is critical because the reality of oppression and closure
of public spaces exists.
The crisis is characterized
by violent physical conflict where people are killed or displaced
and their properties destroyed. In Chiweshe where the MDC received
a Majority vote in the March elections, 11 people were killed.
Nationwide unemployment
stands at 90%, inflation at 400 000% and four million Zimbabweans
live in South Africa. Food is used as a political weapon and in
areas where the MDC performed well in the post-election, food aid
is deliberately withheld.
The prime lending rate
stands at 4 500% and the largest currency denomination, Z$50million,
cannot buy a pint of beer. Four thousand people die of hunger in
Zimbabwe each week. This equates to 160 000 deaths in 10months compared
with 50 000 deaths in the national war of liberation.
Mugabe has taken our
country back to 1923 when cholera and dysentery were the main causes
of death. Now, as in 1923, people hunt for meat and the cross the
border to South Africa to find work and earn money.
Despite this disastrous
legacy, Zanu-PF stole 50 000 votes to award itself a run-off in
the presidential race. Forcing this run-off in an election that
he lost shows just how desperate Mugabe has become.
In the unlikely event
that Mugabe should win, Zimbabwe faces a further constitutional
crisis since the MDC now controls Parliament.
There must be a solution
in Zimbabwe. Respect for the principles of democracy and the people-s
vote is fundamental to a settlement.
Morgan Tsvangirai must
lead whatever arrangement agreed to. Some might call it "a
transitional authority", others a "government of national
unity", yet others a government of national healing".
The country requires healing, truth, reconciliation and justice.
To help realize these
goals, Zimbabwe might need a truth and justice commission.
In the new government
everyone should be a stakeholder. Yet the MDC draws the line with
Mugabe. He is not part of the future and consequently he cannot
be part of a settlement in Zimbabwe.
Any arrangement must
be based on substance. It must be an opportunistic agreement to
resolve the conflict of elites. It cannot be an elite pact or a
solution as in Kenya.
It must include
fundamentals that can be delivered. There must be a new constitution,
by Zimbabwe for Zimbabwe. There must be a commitment to democratization,
social and economic reconstruction and national healing. Recognition
of the people-s victory of 2008 is essential.
Zimbabwe did what they
could. Alas, where is the midwife to deliver the baby? Southern
African Development Community, the African Union and South Africa
have a duty to play their part. Leadership must emerge from the
international community to fill the vacuum of mediocrity, inaction
and paralysis. Without this the population of Zimbabwe might have
no option but to fight back.
*Tendai
Biti is secretary general of the Movement for Democratic Change
in Zimbabwe. This is an edited version of his speech at an Institute
for Justice and Reconciliation symposium held in Cape Town on May
8.
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