|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Tsvangirai
facing critical choices
Mike Nyoni, ReliefWeb
July 08, 2008
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/KKAA-7GD8K7?OpenDocument
Zimbabwe-s political
stalemate looks set to continue as President Robert Mugabe settles
in for another term and Morgan Tsvangirai of the Movement for Democratic
Change, MDC, struggles to respond to the new, post-election environment.
Tsvangirai,
who pulled out
of the presidential race five days before the June 27 run-off, now
faces a dilemma over whether to accept Mugabe-s offer of talks
or to claim the moral high ground by refusing compromise.
The MDC leader has been
bolstered by support from traditional sympathisers United States,
Britain and Australia, now joined by France and Italy, as well as
by Botswana-s refusal to recognise Mugabe as president.
As foreign governments
continue to question Mugabe-s legitimacy and ponder additional
sanctions against Zimbabwe, any decision they take will be influenced
by what Tsvangirai does next.
Some observers believe
that while the opposition leader-s withdrawal from the election
was motivated by principle - he argued that taking part would
lead to more bloodshed - it was a tactical blunder nonetheless.
They believe he was calculating
that Mugabe would halt the election process and simply declare himself
winner. That would have allowed Tsvangirai to urge the international
community to recognize him as president since he beat Mugabe in
the first round, held on March 29.
Since Mugabe went ahead
with the ballot anyway, the position has become much muddier,
Analysts say any delay
in the political process could now work in Mugabe-s favour,
allowing him to consolidate his hold and power and giving his ZANU-PF
party time to consider another option - finding a successor
from within the regime to keep international criticism at bay.
According to
Eldred Masunungure, a political sciences lecturer at the University
of Zimbabwe, if the regime were able to engineer a seamless
change of leadership, allowing Mugabe to step aside, Zimbabwe-s
southern African neighbors might be prepared to overlook the flawed
election.
'The dynamics in
the region and the international community might change and the
MDC find itself forgotten again,- he said. 'The region
is feeling the contagion of the Zimbabwean crisis and will grasp
at anyone who promises a quick end to this.-
Two days before the African
Union issued its call for power-sharing in a 'government of
national unity-, Mugabe used his June 29 inauguration ceremony
to make what sounded like conciliatory noises, saying he was prepared
to negotiate with the MDC as long as it shared his vision of the
country-s future.
However, he returned
from the African Union summit in more belligerent mood, demanding
that Tsvangirai and the MDC recognise him as president before he
would contemplate negotiations. He also demanded that the West lift
the sanctions imposed on him and his inner circle after his disputed
election victory in 2000.
Tsvangirai, meanwhile,
declared last week that he would not negotiate with an 'illegitimate
president-.
When South African president
Thabo Mbeki paid a fleeting visit to Zimbabwe at the weekend in
a bid to revive his mediation effort between the MDC and ZANU-PF,
Tsvangirai refused to meet him on the grounds that going to the
venue, State House, would be tantamount to acknowledging Mugabe
as head of state.
The Zimbabwean opposition
views the South African leader-s claim to neutrality with
more than a little suspicion, suspecting him of favoring Mugabe.
Mbeki has been acting
as mediator on behalf of the Southern African Development Community,
SADC, a grouping of regional states. The recent African Union summit
asked the SADC to continue leading the mediating effort instead
of taking on a more robust role itself, as some had hoped it would.
Some observers say continued
reluctance to engage in negotiations could prove another error on
Tsvangirai-s part. He may occupy the high ground, but he might
have to make concessions in the face of demands for an end to Zimbabwe-s
profound political and economic crisis.
'Mugabe says he
wants to talk, so Tsvangirai has got to talk, otherwise people will
see him as the stumbling block to the resolution of the crisis,-
said Richard Chitova, a rural school teacher in Mashonaland Central
province. 'People are tired of the crisis and want it to end
quickly.-
Masunungure agreed with
this view, saying,-Dialogue is unavoidable and inevitable.
Neither of the parties has a solution to the country-s structural
problems on his own . . . . Tsvangirai may have the legitimacy but
he doesn-t have political power. Mugabe-s legitimacy
may be questionable but he has the means to remain in power.-
Should negotiations take
place, Masunungure notes that the MDC will be forced to accept a
lesser role since Mugabe is now officially president again.
'The trouble is
that while the MDC was preoccupied with means and legality, Mugabe
wanted to retain power by any means necessary and that is what he
has done. He has already been installed, though we should not confuse
legality and legitimacy,- he said.
Tsvangirai-s dilemma
about what his next move should be is complicated by the high risks
associated with deploying one of his most powerful forms of leverage
- asking the international community to impose more sanctions
on Zimbabwe.
The United States and
its allies have proposed tougher sanctions and have even suggested
the introduction of a peacekeeping force to stem the bloodletting.
According to Masunungure,
an open call for sanctions could alienate Tsvangirai both from his
voters and from other African nations.
'This is a tricky
issue,- said Masunungure. 'They [the MDC] cannot call
for the imposition of more sanctions on the country when people
are suffering. This would alienate even the support of SADC [Southern
African Development Community] neighbours. Similarly, the MDC cannot
boast of its ability to bring foreign aid to revive the economy
without being accused of supporting the current sanctions. It-s
a double-edged sword.-
So it is back to the
drawing board again, and that could spell a further period of political
violence, as well as the apparently endless economic meltdown.
The MDC says more than
100 of its supporters were killed by pro-Mugabe militias before
and during the second-round election.
Masunungure argues that
on its own, Mugabe-s government can do nothing useful to save
the economy.
Inflation has reached
astronomical heights, unemployment stands at 85 per cent of the
population, and food and fuel are in short supply.
The food situation worsened
in the run-up to the presidential run-off, as the government banned
aid groups from operating in the countryside, accusing them of using
food distribution as a campaign tool for the MDC - a claim
these organisations deny.
*Mike Nyoni
is the pseudonym of a journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|