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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
MDC pull out from presidential run-off election - Index of articles
What
next for Zimbabwe?
Janah Ncube
Extracted from Pambazuka News No. 384
June 26, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/48995
Morgan Tsvangirai
dropped a bombshell by announcing his withdrawal
as a candidate from the Presidential runoff elections scheduled
to be held on June 27, 2008. This certainly cannot have been an
easy decision for Mr. Tsvangirai who recently got the majority vote
of 48% over President Mugabe-s 43%. The first time he contested
as a candidate in 2002, the elections were marked with significant
irregularities and he lost. This time, he does know for a fact that
the majority of voters wanted him to be the next President but due
to a recently introduced Constitutional
clause, the next President of Zimbabwe must have 51% of the votes.
His decision has caused
much chaos and confusion and a lot of people have been left perplexed
and some feel betrayed by this move. Mr. Tsvangirai in his statement
states his reasons for withdrawing as being state sponsored violence,
his crippled campaign, the decimation of his party-s structures,
the partisanship of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, MDC media
blackout, the threats of war by the ZANU PF candidate and the backing
they have received from the leaders of the army and the police and
the planned rigging by ZANU PF.
The whole world
has been following events in Zimbabwe since March 29 2008 when Zimbabwe
held its harmonized elections whose results took over 2 weeks to
be released. The situation has continuously deteriorated to become
grim, tense and unbearable for Zimbabweans. The escalated levels
of violence have seen the continuous brutal murder of ordinary Zimbabweans,
their being mutilated, defaced, and having some of their body parts
dismembered. There is a lot of blood being spilt in Zimbabwe right
now in name of patriotism and change. As said by the Feminist Political
Education Project in their April,
May and June
2008 statements, the Zimbabwe crises cannot be solved by another
election. Zimbabwe could not afford it. The prevailing socio economic
and political conditions in the country and the threats of war by
President Mugabe certainly discredit any electoral process.
So indeed, it is a relief
that one of the candidates has exercised responsible leadership
and stepped down from this election to protect the lives and the
good of Zimbabwean people. The iniquitous armies of security personnel,
hooligans, young men and women who are being armed by the politicians
to execute violence and dishonour to other Zimbabweans, are causing
great loss, pain and destruction not just to people-s bodies
and property but to the soul of Zimbabwe as a Nation. The social
harmony in the country has been shredded.
Thus Morgan Tsvangirai
has not betrayed the struggle. In the light of the 29 March 2008
vote, the women and men tortured, violated and murdered since then,
he is recognizing rather that you do not negotiate with the devil,
nor do you play the game using his rules in his home ground. This
is wising up.
My Pastor taught me that
if you want to over-ride one law, you use a higher law. That is
what Ghandi did, that is what Martin Luther King Junior did. Tsvangirai
needs to use a higher law if he is to win any contest against ZANU
PF. To continue with the game in such skewed circumstances would
have set him up to loose and worse, legitimate a farce.
If Morgan Tsvangirai
had proceeded in this election, he would have facilitated for Mugabe
to not just be declared a winner but to do so in blazing glory.
What we know is that should it have happened, the world would have
complained a bit at first and then quietly moved on as we saw in
Nigeria and Kenya-s last Presidential elections.
What Zimbabwe urgently
needs is a negotiated settlement which should result in a Transitional
Arrangement (TA) whose mandate is to foster an environment in which
Zimbabweans can exercise their right to elect a leader without being
subjected to violence, fear, intimidation or desperate socio economic
conditions.
This arrangement should
result in a body that will be given executive powers to manage government
and state affairs for a limited period. The period should be determined
by the amount of time needed to arrive at a democratically developed
and adopted constitution. It should also be determined by the amount
of time needed to restore relative peace and calm.
It cannot be headed by
either Mr. Tsvangirai or President Mugabe, but rather by a Zimbabwean
leader who acceptable to all political stakeholders. She or he would
be assisted by a team composed of notable citizens of various disciplines
that can be entrusted to manage portfolios to resuscitate our country-s
industries, social sectors and rebuild trust in national institutions.
None of these individuals should be politicians in any of the political
parties recognized in Zimbabwe. The individuals in this body should
not be allowed to run for any elections or public office appointed
for at least 6 years after they have handed power over to an elected
government.
With the leadership of
state security agencies making partisan statements in support of
ZANU PF and also with members of these agencies currently involved
in meting out violence, a peace keeping force may need to be deployed
in Zimbabwe to restore confidence to the people and also ensure
that when elections take place, no armed renegades will take matters
into their own hands. We cannot have our country held at ransom
by threats to use arms we paid for as citizens, against us.
SADC and other African
countries need to recognise that the fate of Zimbabwe is in their
hands. We are not seeking the West to rescue our country, we are
calling on our brothers and sisters to help us. The Heads of State
in the SADC region now need to stand with the people of Zimbabwe
and not its political leaders. While the quiet diplomacy strategy
may have made sense at a certain turn in mediating the Zimbabwe
crises that strategy has not worked.
The worst has happened,
the Zimbabwean government has turned against its people and the
people of Zimbabwe need to know that SADC and Africa stands with
them and are not colluding with Mugabe and ZANU PF. The silence
by SADC and other African states loudly condones what is being done
in Zimbabwe. Zimbabweans and African people in general, need to
know that African Heads of State are not cushioning and protecting
someone who is blatantly and brazenly destroying the people he should
be protecting and the country he should be building.
The one country, one-man
mediation has truly been unfair considering the magnitude and complexity
of the problem. To expect South African President Mbeki to handle
this problem alone is to set him up for failure. He achieved much
but certainly will not achieve anymore from this point on. The region
as a bloc now needs to take responsibility and work together on
this.
The Chairperson of SADC
needs to again mobilise his peers but this time to take robust hands
on responses to the Zimbabwean people. We all know that Zimbabwe
has cost all SADC countries a whole lot economically, opportunity
wise, stability wise and so it is to the interest of the region
to solve this issue immediately.
More of African leaders
need to follow the examples of Rwanda-s President Paul Kagame
and Kenya-s Prime Minister Raila Odinga. They should be picking
up their phones and calling SADC leaders and sending their envoys
to SADC countries to urge SADC to take decisive action that will
change things in the country and result in a transitional arrangement.
What is clear at this
moment is that we have an illegitimate violent regime holding power.
This should not be allowed to stand. We have a weak opposition waiting
to rule, and this is unlikely to happen soon. A Government of National
Unity is an impossible option in Zimbabwe with all that is currently
taking place. However, a transitional arrangement is possible and
will give us the time and space for tempers to cool down, and for
anger to subside and we can again dream of a Zimbabwe that we all
own and are proud of.
*Janah Ncube
writes this essay as a concerned Zimbabwean citizen.
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