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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
MDC
must prepare for worst case scenario
Alex T. Magaisa
May 30, 2008
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/magaisa80.18267.html
As the campaign
for the June 27 presidential run-off Election shifts into high gear,
and positive though the spirit may be, Morgan Tsvangirai and the
MDC ought to do what they have probably never done before: prepare
and strategise for the worst case scenario.
To be sure, the election
itself is unavoidable, lest Zanu PF secures the presidency on a
silver platter. In the current context, Tsvangirai-s position
is akin to that of a hunter running hard to escape the jaws of a
lion whereupon after climbing the big tree, he comes face to face
with a King Cobra. The hunter has to weigh and take risks in very
limited space of time. This, Tsvangirai has done by choosing to
contest knowing very well that even that route is long, rugged and
at some point, may become impassable.
Given the events since
the March 29 election, it looks increasingly likely that Mugabe
and Zanu PF will do everything in their power to claim perhaps another
of the proverbial cat-s nine lives.
For when you observe
the pictures of the walking wounded; of the women, both young and
old, brutalised in the most sacred and most soft parts of the anatomy;
of the young men brutally slain in cold-blood; there is, plainly,
little left to imagine what these fellow members of the human species
authoring this orgy of violence can do. You do wonder whether there
is heart somewhere in their shells that, one day, could be rehabilitated.
At the end of the day, one is left with the grim feeling that these
events are the harbinger of worse to come.
For Mugabe and Zanu PF,
the election is no more than a ritual to confer legality to their
retention of power. They simply have no intention of giving up power
-- whatever the electorate thinks.
There are at least two
worst case scenarios that Tsvangirai and the MDC are likely to face
come June 27:
Rejection
of a Tsvangirai victory
First, the less likely scenario is that Tsvangirai may be declared
the winner of the election by the ZEC but that victory will not
be accepted by Zanu PF. There is a real possibility that elements
in Zanu PF will carry out their threat to thwart his bid even if
he wins. The elaborate machinations following the March 29 election
are indicative of their intentions. Zanu PF is unlikely to change
this stance.
After March 29, the MDC
made some high-level noise and carried out unprecedented diplomatic
manoeuvres on the African circuit. It did not change the result
but may have swayed significant African opinion. Mugabe prefers
the portrayal of a law-abiding man and a coup against a declared
winner would be more embarrassing. It would cause him to lose the
sympathy of even the faithfully loyal President Thabo Mbeki. That
is why this prospect of permitting a declaration of Tsvangirai as
the winner and, therefore, necessitating a 'coup- is
most unlikely.
Swift
declaration of Mugabe victory
The
second and more likely scenario is that Mugabe will be swiftly declared
the winner of the June 27 election. Delaying the result is unlikely
as it has been seen to be counterproductive post March 29. This
time it will be a short, sharp and very swift execution conferring
the presidency to Mugabe. Such an announcement will provide the
cover of legality on Mugabe-s presidency, albeit a very controversial
one, but that will not deter them.
This will be sufficient
because legally, it will place Tsvangirai and the MDC on the back
foot, making them the challengers to the process, a position Mugabe
and Zanu PF have found hard work from since March 29. They will
not want that again and a quick announcement as happened in Kenya-s
recent elections will come in handy.
This scenario will shift
the balance of advantage from Tsvangirai and the MDC to Mugabe and
Zanu PF. It will be the MDC and Tsvangirai operating from a position
of weakness, being the 'losing- candidate.
It is quite likely that
in that situation, Zanu PF will be more open to the idea of a government
of national unity ("GNU"), to which they have, so far,
given mixed reactions They would rather do it as the senior partner
than the junior guest invited to the MDC banquet.
The MDC will at that
stage be faced with very hard choices but this could be eased by
forward planning; by anticipating the fact that one or other worst
case scenario is more likely to arise. Given what has happened so
far, the MDC should be planning and strategising for how to handle
a controversial 'defeat- on June 27.
Reality:
A world of the crafty and ruthless
It
is in this area of strategising in the face of patent risks where
the MDC has appeared to stutter in the past. The MDC-s Achilles
Heel has always been an almost infantile innocence in the face of
a ruthless and crafty rival. The MDC appears to operate in anticipation
of the best outcome but without accounting for the probability the
worst possible outcome.
But its approach in dealings
with Zanu PF is reflective of the society in which it exists. We
are taught that democracy is for good men and women, who believe
in peace, use peaceful methods, co-operate and do all the 'right-
things. We live in a world in which we observe older and mature
democracies where democratic values have been inculcated over time.
What we are not taught, however, is that even in these older democracies,
things were not always that straightforward. Democracy has come
a long way and they have had and, in many ways, still have to deal
with ruthless and crafty opponents in the Zanu PF mould.
We operate in anticipation
of peace, fair-play and togetherness. What we are not taught is
that, in fact, there are considerable levels of conflict at all
levels of society - family, community, national and indeed
international. We overlook the obvious reality that in society there
are crafty and ruthless individuals who will employ every tool and
method in the book to outdo us in various endeavours. We are taught
to abhor conflict and violence but we are not taught to be prepared
for the reality in which conflict is, in fact, prevalent. We are,
therefore, often unprepared to deal with crafty and ruthless individuals
and, indeed, situations of conflict.
This is the same predicament
in which the MDC finds itself. It is fighting for democracy using
'democratic- means and tactics but is not prepared for
the reality presented by the crafty opponent that it faces.
The net result is that
on various occasions it has been caught off-guard; unprepared for
the worst case scenario that usually arises from Zanu PF-s
machinations. Zanu PF, being crafty as usual, knows this. The March
29 election was a test and it knows that once again the MDC was
prepared for victory but not necessarily for defeat. The same lack
of preparedness to deal with the worst case was evident after the
2002 Presidential election when indecisiveness derailed the MDC-s
obvious momentum at the time.
Strategising
for the worst case
As
in everyday life, Tsvangirai and the MDC have the hard task of devising
strategies to deal with an aggressive and crafty rival with a legendary
streak of employing underhand tactics. They have to work not on
the basis of anticipating victory but of the very real chance of
the realisation of the worst case scenario.
It will not be easy but
this is when the MDC needs to cast its net wider, draw on the collective
wisdom of those that support its cause and put in place a highly
rational yet emotionally balanced strategy to deal with the worst
possible eventuality. It needs to do more than Zanu PF and open
its doors for that collective wisdom to filter through.
*Alex Magaisa
is based at Kent Law School, UK and can be contacted at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
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