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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
A
defining moment for Zimbabwe
Bill
Saidi, Pambazuka News
July 03, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/49176
It may be too
early to speak of a positive response to calls for a government
of national unity. It would be most encouraging to conclude that
both parties are agreed on the essence of a GNU. But this would
not be an accurate or even remotely hopeful analysis of the scenario.
First, there is the violence in which unarmed citizens have been
victims of mayhem. Secondly, there is the unresolved question of
who should head this GNU - Tsvangirai or Mugabe. If this were going
to turn out to be a defining moment for Zimbabwe, you could argue,
with good reason, that both men would lower their own personal expectations
in favour of their country-s and their people-s. But
would that be realistic? asks Bill Saidi.
In essence, what came
out of the African Union summit in Egypt, which presumably ventilated
the Zimbabwean imbroglio thoroughly, was to leave it to the people
to gird their loins for what might turn out to be a bruising or
an amicable struggle to rescue the country from the brink of a disaster.
The mildly critical
declaration for
a call for a government of national unity contained no muscle that
one could detect from a distance. Its politeness, as with everything
the AU has attempted on Zimbabwe, must have been greeted by huge
yawns of boredom by both combatants in the struggle.
It was Zanu PF, rather
than the MDC, which appeared to react with a degree of animation
to the proposal. Sikanyiso Ndlovu, the Minister of Information,
sounded so upbeat it was as if the AU had responded specifically
to his government-s call for a government of national unity
(GNU). The MDC, almost predictably, introduced the rider that such
an arrangement ought to be headed by Morgan Tsvangirai, who beat
President Robert Mugabe to the presidency in the 29 March presidential
election. Zanu PF would probably engage in a fit of gnashing of
teeth before responding to that proposal - just as predictably -
with the rejoinder that its leader ought to be the head of such
a government.
This will be on the nebulous
basis of his so-called victory in the 27 June farce which Zanu PF
insists was a free and fair affair in which 85 percent of the voters,
presumably, voted freely for Mugabe. There were widespread reports
that some voters marked their ballots with "You will rule
yourself, not us - we are fed up with you".
How Zanu PF reached the
conclusion that all voters turned up at the polling booths willingly
shouldn-t surprise any objective analyst of the Zimbabwean
situation. From the beginning, Zanu PF wanted it known throughout
the world that it would not accept an arrangement which it had not
controlled. The 29 March elections produced results which showed
the party being resoundingly trounced by the opposition. But almost
all that was overturned: the government took its own sweet time
to announce the results. By that time, according to the opposition,
"certain things" had been "doctored" and
Zanu PF had suddenly performed quite creditably in all the polls.
Yes, it had lost its
parliamentary majority in one fell swoop and had performed less
than spectacularly in the presidential stakes, but it would live
to fight another day - in the run-off of the presidential
election.
About 70 people, most
of them opposition supporters, were killed in the run-up to the
run-off. Mugabe declared publicly that "only God could remove
him from office". It was the kind of contemptuous statement
Mugabe has recently made to emphasise his utter disregard for even
the elementary requirements for a free and fair election.
Why he would expect the
opposition to participate in such a poll is beyond comprehension.
Nobody, not even Thabo Mbeki, with his mealy-mouthed stance on Zimbabwe,
could speak of the poll as anything other than what others thought
of it: a travesty and a sham.
Mbeki would not use those
words, but even he must have been frightened at the temerity with
which his political idol seemed to regard that charade. Mugabe was
swiftly sworn into office and just as speedily flown off to Egypt
for the AU summit. Television footage of his reception by his colleagues
at Sharm el-Sheikh suggested most of them were a little embarrassed,
if not ashamed, at his presence. He may have met some of them privately,
but there was notably no TV footage of such tête-à-tête
meetings.
What we did see, though,
was his media spokesman, George Charamba, almost foaming at the
mouth as he shooed off reporters from the president. It was amazing
that Charamba found it necessary to tell the West, on camera, "to
go hang". At some time in the future, that portrait of him
may return to haunt him time and time again.
Mugabe himself was shown
as if he was about to lunge at a reporter who apparently had asked
him a question which he evidently found "cheeky". All
in all, it was not at all a worthwhile public relations exercise
for Zimbabwe: the president, a man generally regarded as being unfriendly
to the media, could only have sent that reputation plunging to the
pits of notoriety.
The performance of the
AU at the summit was once again as shameful as that of its predecessor,
the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), which somehow agreed to
hold a summit in Idi Amin-s capital of Kampala, at a time
when that odious dictator had displayed the worst traits of a megalomaniac,
with a touch of cannibalism thrown in.
Only Raila Odinga seemed
courageous enough to speak on camera of a call to expel Mugabe from
the AU until free and fair elections are held in Zimbabwe. This
is crucial for any future debate on the Zimbabwean situation by
the AU or by any other regional or international blocs.
Elections in the country
have generally contained an element of farce which most African
leaders have refused to acknowledge as such. One good reason for
this is that there are only a handful of African countries which
could boast of truly free and fair elections since their independence.
Many are led by people who achieved power through the barrel of
the gun.
Although Mugabe has recently
boasted that Zimbabwe-s independence was won solely through
the armed struggle, it should not be forgotten that there were protracted
negotiations in London - with not an AK47 in sight - at which
all the players took part and had to sign an agreement.
Angola and Mozambique,
which became independent after a 1974 coup in Portugal ended that
country-s colonial adventure in Africa and elsewhere, were
handed their independence, virtually, on a platter. Incidentally,
that did not ensure a smooth transition. Hundreds of lives were
still lost in the internecine bloodshed that followed this orderly
handover of power.
In Zimbabwe, 20,000 were
killed in a virtual civil war after 18 April 1980. After the AU
summit, there appeared to have been noises of conciliation emerging
from both Zanu PF and the MDC. It may be too early to speak of a
positive response to calls for a government of national unity. It
would be most encouraging to conclude that both parties are agreed
on the essence of a GNU. But this would not be an accurate or even
remotely hopeful analysis of the scenario.
First, there is the violence
in which unarmed citizens have been victims of mayhem. Secondly,
there is the unresolved question of who should head this GNU - Tsvangirai
or Mugabe. If this were going to turn out to be a defining moment
for Zimbabwe, you could argue, with good reason, that both men would
lower their own personal expectations in favour of their country-s
and their people-s. But would that be realistic?
The 27 June election
was described as a "joke", which would sound ghoulish
if you considered that people were being killed even as the voting
got under way or when the president was being sworn for another
term of office. Why most people do not dwell on the bloodstained
nature of the election campaign is probably an "African thing".
Most election campaigns on the continent feature a certain amount
of bloodletting, witness that in Kenya.
Many Zimbabweans, observing
from afar the TV footage of the gory situation in Kenya, swore it
would not happen in their country. But it did and most were thoroughly
disgusted that they had allowed themselves to be duped by Zanu PF
into believing that the party had turned over a new leaf and would
exit the political arena quietly, having been thoroughly humiliated
by the MDC.
Mugabe was in competition
with nobody, Tsvangirai having pulled out and being holed up in
the Dutch embassy in Harare. Tsvangirai has been criticised for
not standing firmly alongside his supporters in their time of greatest
need. He has spent time in exile in Botswana and South Africa, apparently
fearing for his life.
One point in his favour
is that there is no denying that, if an opportunity was presented
to his enemies to liquidate him, the chances are that they would
grab it with both hands. He has been severely brutalised in the
past, by the war veterans and by "men in dark glasses",
officers of the murderous Central Intelligence Office (CIO).
In 1990, one such officer
was charged, found guilty and sentenced to a term in prison for
his part in the attempted assassination of Patrick Kombayi, then
a candidate for the opposition Zimbabwe Unity Movement (ZUM). The
two men were pardoned by Mugabe. Officers of this same clandestine
unit have reportedly participated actively in the so-called "retribution"
campaign launched by the government and Zanu PF after the 29 March
elections.
The impunity with which
this campaign was carried out convinced many people, previously
unable to believe such brutality could be carried out in the name
of a government professing to be democratic and a respectable member
of the international community, that Zanu PF was in a real bind.
Its chances of winning the election had been eroded by an economy
so tattered and derelict its likelihood of ever recovering seemed
almost non-existent.
It is this tottering
economy which the government has said has been the target of Western
economic sanctions. The government, in fact, blames the sanctions
for all its economic woes. But an influential British commentator
has dismissed sanctions as an effective tool against what he calls
"brutal rulers" of Mugabe-s ilk.
Simon Jenkins says in
an article in The Guardian newspaper this week: "Economic
sanctions are a coward-s war. They do not work but are a way
in which the rich elites feel they are 'committed- to
some distant struggle. They enjoy lasting appeal to politicians
because they cost them nothing and are rhetorically macho."
Jenkins refers specifically to the decision by the supermarket group
Tesco to stop buying produce from Zimbabwe, "while the political
crisis exists". He contrasts this with the stance of the company-s
competitor, Waitrose, which has decided not to stop buying from
Zimbabwe. "It believes withdrawal would devastate 'the
workers and their extended families."
There has never been
any universal applause for economic sanctions against recalcitrant
nations. Jenkins makes the point by referring to sanctions imposed
on a number of nations which he claimed had no effect whatsoever.
"In almost every case, sanctions make the evil richer and
more secure, and the poor poorer." Jenkins quotes the dictionary
meaning of sanctions "as a specific penalty enacted in order
to enforce obedience to the law".
While he suggests that
only an invasion would be effective, he refers to the invasion of
Iraq as being considered as "a step too far." "We
toss gestures that will not bring about Mugabe-s downfall,
only make the poor less able to resist his thugs. And all so that
Tesco can feel better for a day." "Yet there are many
who believe that "every little bit helps". In other
words, even the mildest inconvenience to the people of an offending
nation is likely to have an effect on their attitude towards the
government.
Zimbabwe-s economy
is in the proverbial doldrums, some of it totally unrelated to sanctions,
but caused by malfeasance and maladministration. For instance, Mugabe
himself has railed against his own cabinet ministers over the corruption
involving the land reform programme. Some of them have two, three
or even four farms, when he has decreed that they should have only
one. Moreover, others have not developed these previously white-owned
properties to their previous level of productivity, using them for
speculative purposes, instead.
In insisting that the
sanctions have hurt most ordinary, average-income earners, the government
had hoped to persuade voters not to continue with their support
for the opposition. The idea has been to paint them with the same
brush as the West, which the government alleges launched its anti-Zimbabwe
campaign after the land reform programme.
All this has failed to
impress most voters, because, for a majority of workers, the luxuries
accorded to cabinet ministers and the heads of parastatal companies
are so lavish, they cannot imagine the country suffering any real
pain from the sanctions - unless there is a political reason
for making the workers the main targets and sufferers.
And since the opposition
draws most of its support from the workers, that conclusion is not
difficult for them to arrive at. Tsvangirai once said he believed
if the South Africans imposed any kind of sanctions on Zimbabwe,
they would have such a devastating impact on the economy Mugabe
would soon rush to Mbeki on bended knees to beg him to reverse the
decision, in return for anything he wanted - including the
immediate re-opening of direct talks with the opposition.
Recently, the MDC leader
has not been vocal on sanctions, perhaps in the perhaps forlorn
hope that Mbeki, under enormous criticism for his lacklustre performance
as the main mediator, would at last bend to the wishes of the Zimbabweans
and make their geriatric and despotic leader the kind of deal he
wouldn-t resist.
* Bill Saidi is the deputy editor of The Standard, an independent
newspaper in Harare.
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