|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
The
tragedy of Tsvangirai
Stephen
Chan, Prospect Magazine
August 2008
http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10310
I left Zimbabwe
the day after Robert Mugabe was reinaugurated as president. Watching
on state television as the old man swore fealty to the country he
has ruined, I packed my bag for the long haul back to London. It
is winter now in Zimbabwe, meaning the days are like an English
spring in their lightness and warmth, and the nights plunge to just
a few degrees above zero. Everyone I talk to affects a jaded determination
to survive, but there will be cold nights ahead.
I have seen many Zimbabwean
elections. My first was in 1980 when, as a member of the Commonwealth
observer group, I helped monitor the transition to independence
and Mugabe's first electoral triumph. I have attended almost all
campaigns or elections since, including all of this year's polls-the
March elections and the June presidential runoffs. Over the years
I have seen-close up-the hopes of the majority of Zimbabweans dashed
by a corrupt and vicious oligarchy which cloaks itself in the rhetoric
of anti-colonialism and self-determination.
The situation is all
the more tragic because this year the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) handed Mugabe victory on a plate-the result of a miscalculation,
a loss of nerve or both by its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai. This failure
has strengthened Mugabe's hand in the negotiations over a national
unity government now taking place, after the "memorandum of
understanding" signed by Mugabe and Tsvangirai on 21st July.
The memorandum is a reason for cautious optimism-nevertheless, for
the MDC the election was a bitter defeat; for Tsvangirai a personal
tragedy.
Mugabe was never going
to surrender the presidency without a dirty fight. Zanu-PF youth
gangs and militias were told not to kill too many, but to dish out
exemplary violence wherever they went. These beatings and torture
sessions were interspersed with the constant threat of something
even more violent to come. Entire villages and outlying city suburbs
were issued with death threats. I have friends who were taken from
Epworth, one of the poorest areas of Harare, to a remote location
and held in complete silence for three days. The only thing they
were told came at the start of the ordeal: "We could kill you
and no one would even find your bodies." After sweating out
days of fear and uncertainty, the captives became compliant and
their abductors knew that Zanu-PF had nothing to fear from them.
Meanwhile, the
anti-Mugabe forces were in chaos. The international community was
divided in its tactics. The western nations-led by the British and
the Americans-condemned loudly and pressed for sanctions, much to
the discomfort of Zimbabwe's neighbours, who feared it might help
push the country closer to civil war. South Africa, Botswana and
Zambia have already absorbed large economic costs from the Zimbabwean
meltdown and they feared that the collapse of Mugabe's dictatorship
would lead to anarchy and further spillover into neighbouring countries.
Moreover, western rhetoric didn't play well with the average Zimbabwean.
Seen from the Harare street, Gordon Brown's performance in the House
of Commons after the runoff election results, announcing a plan
to push for new sanctions, was exactly what was not needed. It was
a continuation of the Blair era, when foreign policy towards Africa
could be simultaneously well-meant and supercilious. Few in Harare
have forgotten Clare Short's infamous letter-written during the
first days of the Blair administration-in which the then development
secretary pointed to her own Irish "colonial victim" status
and repudiated a British undertaking to fund land nationalisation:
an act that helped create the climate that later led to violent
(and uncompensated) land seizures. Meanwhile, US attempts to advise
the MDC on election tactics had, as we shall see, disastrous consequences.
If the foreigners were
at sixes and sevens, the domestic opposition was little better.
The MDC went into the elections still split from the divisions of
late 2005 and early 2006, when a breakaway faction, led by Arthur
Mutambara with strategic direction from Welshman Ncube, established
a power base in western Zimbabwe and among many of the MDC's intellectual
supporters. The split occurred amid accusations that Tsvangirai
was no longer behaving democratically, taking decisions unilaterally
which should have received the approval of the party's executive
committee. Tsvangirai has always been impatient of process. Perhaps
he came to believe he was the MDC. This was enough to fracture the
MDC's brittle unity-and even the prospect of electoral victory was
insufficient to repair it.
The two sides did try
to heal their divisions, but Tsvangirai was unwilling to withdraw
from contesting enough seats in Mutambara's western stronghold to
reunite the party. Almost all Zimbabwean commentators agree that
this was a fatal misjudgement on Tsvangirai's part. Had the MDC
entered the first presidential round in lockstep with Mutambara,
Tsvangirai might have got the crucial extra votes to win the presidency
outright. As it was, Mutambara unselfishly refrained from running
for president himself, giving Tsvangirai a clear run (although he
did endorse a third-party candidate, Simba Makoni). But the voting
patterns from the western constituencies show that the damage had
been done. Mutambara's people felt slighted and Mugabe did much
better than expected in the west.
Tsvangirai has
always been a hit-and-miss politician-capable of strokes of genius
but also prone to periods of wayward and ineffectual leadership.
Born in 1952, Tsvangirai is the son of a rural carpenter-a member
of the black lower middle class and a member of the same majority
Shona ethnic group as Mugabe. Tsvangirai did not complete his education
but found work as a nickel miner in the mid-1970s. He became politically
active through his union affiliation, where he ascended the ladder,
gaining a reputation as an effective negotiator, and eventually
became the head of the national union movement in 1988. Originally
an enthusiastic supporter of Zanu-PF, he became disillusioned after
Mugabe's first big authoritarian crackdown in Harare in 1991. The
rift deepened in the mid-1990s as Tsvangirai clashed with the government
over the impact on his members of an IMF structural adjustment programme
that crimped the economy.
Tsvangirai has always
been a man of action and used to like teasing Zimbabwean intellectuals
for thinking too much. He can be ruthless, as in the late 1990s
when the MDC arose from, then split with, the National Constitutional
Assembly (NCA), just when that body was becoming the largest civil
society group Zimbabwe had ever known. Many in the NCA took a long
time to forgive him, but the secession of the MDC decisively tilted
the struggle against Mugabe and Zanu-PF into the realm of party
politics, rather than grassroots action. Yet Tsvangirai's flashes
of ruthless decisiveness can be accompanied by protracted hesitation.
The MDC has often seemed rudderless. In fact, the captain is at
the tiller but not steering the ship.
I admire Tsvangirai.
I wrote a book about him, based on many hours of face-to-face interviews,
which was distributed underground in Zimbabwe to help the MDC's
2005 campaign. I attended those elections and acknowledged the book
was mine. I was and am prepared to stand up for Tsvangirai. But
I also want to say that he screwed up.
Tsvangirai should have
remained inside Zimbabwe for longer periods- especially between
this year's first and second polls. While he and his deputy Tendai
Biti courted international support, they left their party leaderless.
The split in the MDC had left Tsvangirai's party as the larger of
two factions, but Mutambara and Ncube had most of the politically
astute thinkers in their group. Tsvangirai relied increasingly on
advice from Biti, and with both of them travelling outside Zimbabwe,
there was no second tier to hold the MDC together and give party
workers strategic direction. There was also an undercurrent of suspicion,
fanned by Zanu-PF, that Tsvangirai had lost his nerve and was putting
his personal safety above the welfare of his people. The loss of
MDC morale was clear.
Tsvangirai's main source
of advice was the US embassy in Harare, especially after Mugabe's
government arrested Biti on treason charges and imprisoned him two
weeks before the runoff. The deliberate effect of the arrest was
to deprive Tsvangirai of local guidance during the crucial closing
stages of the campaign. This became a test of nerve: Zanu-PF wanted
to break Tsvangirai's will by isolating him and threatening him
physically. The US embassy sought to fill the gap, and was complicit
in Tsvangirai's decisions to withdraw from the elections and seek
refuge in the Dutch embassy. The plan was to hand Mugabe a hollow
victory which the west could then attack. The US analysis was that
the polls had already been fixed so a Tsvangirai victory was impossible.
Participation would only legitimise a brazen "steal."
The idea was also to create an image of such great intimidation
that even a leader of the opposition could find safety from assassination
only on diplomatic soil.
I want also to say unequivocally
that the Americans screwed up. When Tsvangirai withdrew, Zanu-PF
could hardly believe their luck. They were beginning to realise
they were on the verge of overplaying their only hand, that of violence.
Then, out of the blue, Tsvangirai solved all their problems for
them.
Contrary to western information,
Tsvangirai's consultation of his own party members, who did indeed
protest they didn't want to die for nothing, was brief and sketchy.
When the "consultation" took place, there was only a week
to go before the runoff poll. At that point, the worst was probably
over. Zanu-PF was under pressure to reduce the violence in the face
of external African criticism. The party would have still sought
to rig the count, but the result would have been at least more contestable
and, at best, surprising.
Thabo Mbeki was reluctant
to push too hard on Zimbabwe not just because of his complex attachment
to Mugabe, but also because he never believed Tsvangirai would make
an effective leader. This is unfair, as Tsvangirai has clearly matured,
both politically and morally. He has taken almost all that Mugabe
could throw at him. It may be, however, that Mugabe and Zanu-PF
finally found the cracks in a very brave man, and levered them open.
This will all be debated
for a long time. But Tsvangirai took the assassination rumours seriously
enough to take his family into exile. Eleven years ago, he came
within inches of being killed as government agents tried to push
him out of a tenth-floor window high above Harare. He has been on
trial for his life on treason charges. This time, there almost certainly
was a plan to kill him. It is unlikely to have been activated while
the world's attention was focused on Zimbabwe. In that gaze, he
was probably safe, but the weeks of drip-feed rumours finally did
their work.
The net effect is that
Tsvangirai is a diminished leader, even within the MDC. He is universally
regarded as courageous; even his Zanu-PF foes give him that. But
a huge strand of Zanu-PF propaganda and covert action has been devoted
to probing and exploiting his weak points. Few people would not
have stumbled.
Following the disappointments
of recent weeks, Tsvangirai needs to rally his battered forces.
The split in the MDC must be more fully healed and all its leaders
brought back into the tent if the party is not to be outmanoeuvred
again. But Tsvangirai may no longer have the prestige to cement
a reconciliation.
The election
has rammed home his dependence on colleagues, even those who were
rivals, such as Ncube and Biti. Ncube has the feel for both long-range
strategy and policy. A professor of law, he has a strong sense of
procedure and was one of the first to become alienated by Tsvangirai's
liberties with the way the MDC operated. Biti, who remained with
Tsvangirai, is also a lawyer and was long prominent in the fight
for civil liberties and political freedom. But Biti's thinking is
more like that of a barrister-brief by brief. He is a tactician
to Ncube's strategist, and both will be needed in any new unity
government. The exact form of such a government is the next chapter
in the story.
I am sitting in the Oliver
Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, and can feel the tension
seep out of my pores. I left Harare awash with speculation, habitual
cynicism competing with bursts of hope. I have left behind many
desperate people. The biggest difficulty is not the incredible inflation-where
a Z$50bn note will buy just two cups of coffee (at time of going
to press this is now Z$200bn)-or even the recurrent shortages of
food, electricity and treated water. It is the lack of medical supplies.
People dying of Aids and cancer will be given codeine as an analgesic
in the doses we would take for headaches. There are many unpretty
endings to life in Zimbabwe, not all at the hands of government
party thugs. Many more will die if sanctions are stepped up.
As for the long-term
result, the gossip of the African observers at the airport as they
flew out of Harare seems about right. Having won the election, Mugabe
will accept that it was his swan song. The observers confidently
believe the negotiations towards a unity government will succeed.
Sure, there will be a Zanu-PF president, though the identity of
any long-term incumbent will be decided only after a power struggle
among several unsavoury characters. There will have to be a constitutional
amendment to create a Kenyan-style prime minister-this might be
Tsvangirai's prize. The negotiations will determine how much power
the premier holds versus the presidency. Zimbabwe will recover slowly,
again like Kenya, as a land of promise but one riven with deep scars
and huge inequalities.
A few days later, the
African Union's Egyptian summit has finished and Mugabe is flying
home. Zambia and Botswana were highly critical of his "victory."
They were joined by Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal. But only one plan
remains on the table for a post-Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe-and that
is the South African plan for a unity government.
Mugabe was on his best
grandstanding form in Egypt. He gave a long, impassioned and, apparently,
moving piece of oratory, discoursing on the long historical cycle
that would one day vindicate his nationalist mission. But his subsequent
willingness to enter into talks with Tsvangirai shows that even
he must know that the time has passed when appeals to anti-colonial
solidarity could rally the African Union, even if his sentiments
struck residual heartstrings. His lieutenants must also know that,
at the age of 84, he is of little further use to them. They are
all in their 60s and want a secure future for themselves as well
as the fruits of their financial looting. It is these insiders-four
top generals; Emerson Mnangagwa, the minister in charge of internal
security; and Gideon Gono, the governor of the reserve bank-who
will determine the endgame.
It will be messy, of
course, and will require Zanu-PF to be persuaded not to create a
merely cosmetic unity government. For the MDC, one of the key points
of the July memorandum was that regional brokers others than Mbeki
will play a more prominent role. Time will tell if this promise
is honoured, but those now in the frame include Jean Ping of the
African Union. Any mediator needs to be able to dangle some carrots.
The only constructive role the west can now play is in underwriting
the cost of economic recovery. This is a bitter pill. It will involve
underpinning the prosperity of many who have stolen and plundered.
Many of Mugabe's supporters
will demand influence around the table. Much of his core support
is still voluntary-and even enthusiastic-and accounts for up to
40 per cent of the electorate. Although Zanu-PF's supporters are
in the minority, they make up important sectors of society: probably
the majority of the intellectual class, because of Mugabe's nationalist
ideology; the huge majority of the senior military personnel from
the liberation war; the urban oligarchies who have profited from
manipulating an economy in free fall; village headmen who have never
understood the MDC's largely urban appeal and who have been well
rewarded in return; and a small but appreciable group of peasants
who have finally gained ownership of patches of land-an issue that
remains hugely important in Zimbabwe. The MDC, by contrast, is overwhelmingly
the party of Harare and, to a lesser extent, the other big cities
such as Bulawayo and Mutare. Its backbone is the salaried middle
class, which has been the biggest loser from the economic collapse.
Despite holding many
of the cards, Zanu-PF and its backers will have to display restraint.
Among the MDC, the key senior players such as Ncube and Mutambara
will need to be awarded significant ministries. And the best of
the technocratic wing of Zanu-PF, people like Simba Makoni, Mugabe's
other challenger for the presidency, will need to be on board. The
west has always been prepared to do business with Makoni-a technocratic
paragon of "Zanu-PF-lite" who many feel never really left
the party-and might insist on his ministerial inclusion.
Of course, there will
be arguments about Mugabe's eventual departure: about the length
of any transition and whether he should retain a titular presidency.
Although this would be largely ceremonial (Mugabe as the "Queen
of Zimbabwe"), Zanu-PF would fight to retain the "commander-in-chief"
role, meaning Mugabe, and Zanu-PF, would retain ultimate control
of the military.
The elephant in the room
is of course what role might be offered to Tsvangirai. Ironically,
the real threat to his long-term future may not come from Zanu-PF
but from within his own MDC. It is here that personal and political
tragedies intersect. Many within the party are disillusioned with
his recent performance. It is by no means certain he will remain
at the top. If there is a succession, this will involve as many
factional fights within the MDC as are likely to occur in a post-Mugabe
Zanu-PF. The political careers of Makoni and Biti may have some
way to run.
Whoever ultimately runs
Zimbabwe will, of course, inherit an economic disaster. And whatever
the political settlement, things will get worse before they get
better. Gideon Gono has been printing money to cover the cost of
his currency purchases and the result is Weimar-style inflation.
US dollars or South African rand will need to be imposed as a viable
currency, if not directly, then via a new Zimbabwean dollar tied
directly to one of these currencies and underwritten by the international
community for at least three years.
The agricultural sector
will take time to regenerate. Other African providers have seized
Zimbabwean markets; local infrastructure has decayed; there are
few agri-industrial experts in either Zanu-PF or the MDC; and basic
farming infrastructure has fallen apart. The mining industry is
too small to lead an economic revival. And tourism is dead. The
international community must invest heavily and provide balance-of-payments
support. Debts owed to other states will need to be rescheduled.
And reindustrialisation cannot depend on the South African grid,
as Zimbabwe's southern neighbour is itself suffering electrical
shortages.
Many in the 4m-strong
Zimbabwean diaspora will come back as soon as an agreement on a
unity government is declared, but a huge number will wait. For the
sake of the transitional economy, they need to stay out. Their remittances
keep afloat possibly a majority of families, even those with Zanu-PF
sympathies, and will be needed for some time to come. But the longer
they stay out, the more their vital skills will be missed in Zimbabwe.
Repairing the economy
will require extremely painful measures, and any "unity leader"
who implemented them would risk becoming unelectable in any future
"honest" elections. Paradoxically, this may be a reason
for a sort of cynical hope. Zanu-PF knows the economy must be rebuilt.
It may therefore be willing to surrender the top executive post
to an MDC leader-hoping to dodge the unpopularity and pave the way
for a future return to power.
Of course, this
brings us back to Mugabe's state of mind. Will he, or his inner
circle, be able to accept any real political change? The Zanu-PF
publicity on the eve of the election stressed Mugabe's relationship
with God. Full-page advertisements likened him to Moses, then to
King David. Tsvangirai was compared to David's rebellious son, Absalom.
(Someone should have a word with Mugabe's researchers. After all,
Moses never reached the promised land, and Absalom rebelled against
his father on a platform of justice.) That said, Mugabe probably
will go. Having delivered his party one last electoral "victory,"
he will be 89 by the next elections. His party knows a younger leader
must be found before then, and the economy must be stabilised. Mugabe
will be encouraged to bow out by his own people. Look to the September
meeting of the Zanu-PF central committee to outline a timetable
for departure, and the December party congress for the last great
standing ovation from faithful followers. Beyond December lies the
2009 South African election. A Jacob Zuma presidency, much more
heavily critical of Zanu-PF, must finally mean the end for Mugabe.
It is also Tsvangirai's tragedy that this endgame may also encompass
his own political demise.
*Stephen Chan
is the author of Robert
Mugabe: A Life of Power and Violence
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
|