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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
The end of the beginning
David Coltart
September 11, 2008
Nine years to the day
since I stood with Morgan Tsvangirai, Gibson Sibanda, Tendai Biti,
Welshman Ncube and many other patriots on the 11th September 1999
at Rufaro Stadium to launch the MDC a deal has been agreed in Harare
tonight to bring to an end 28 years of brutal Zanu PF rule.
The bare bones of the
deal are as follows. Constitutional amendment 19 will shortly be
moved in Parliament. It will enable to the setting up of an inclusive
Government which in turn will initiate an all inclusive process
of Constitutional reform (which will include civil society). That
process will last 18 months by which time a new democratic Constitution
must be implemented, which will also include a time frame for new
elections at some point to be conducted in terms of the new Constitution.
The inclusive Government
will have Robert Mugabe as President with greatly reduced powers
to those he enjoys today. There will be two, largely ceremonial,
Vice Presidents from Zanu PF. Morgan Tsvangirai will be Prime Minister.
Although he does not have absolute power he does have substantial
power. For example he will advise Mugabe on all future appointments
including Judges, Ambassadors and the like. There will be two Deputy
Prime Ministers, one from MDC T and one from MDC M.
There will be a slightly
cumbersome arrangement for conducting Government business which
is the essence of the compromise agreed to following the impasse
of the last 4 weeks. Cabinet will be chaired by Mugabe; Tsvangirai
will be the vice Chair. Then there will be a Council of Ministers
chaired by Tsvangirai which will supervise the work of Cabinet.
The Cabinet will largely
reflect the votes cast for the different parties in the March election
in which Zanu PF got the most votes (if not the most seats), followed
by the MDC T and MDC M. In a 31 person Cabinet Zanu PF will have
15 seats, MDC T 13 and MDC M 3. There will be 8, 6 and 1 Deputy
Ministers respectively. Accordingly if the two MDC factions work
together, which they must in the national interest, they will enjoy
a majority in Cabinet.
This is undoubtedly historic
but we still have a long and treacherous road to travel. Even had
we in the combined MDC obtained total control the challenges are
immense. The grave humanitarian and economic crises are enough to
test any Government. The new Cabinet that will have to address these
challenges is composed of protagonists - virtually all of
the Cabinet Ministers to be appointed by the MDC T and M have at
some stage in the last 9 years been brutalized on the instructions
of those they will now have to work with. Zimbabwe remains highly
polarised and it will take statesmanship on all sides to make this
work.
But work this must. Zimbabwe
is a great country with a tremendous future and it can and will
get through to a new dawn of freedom. The night is not over yet
but as the great poet Arthur Hugh Clough wrote:
" In
front the sun climbs slow, how slowly, But westward look , the land
is bright".
Winston Churchill said
after the Battle of Egypt on the 10 November 1942 the following
memorable words:
"Now is not the
end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is perhaps,
the end of the beginning."
Those words are apt today.
This has been a long hard struggle and there have been many casualties.
It is not over yet - there are many battles which still lie
ahead - but I am confident that this agreement, imperfect
as it is, marks a significant step forward and will ultimately yield
a new, democratic, vibrant jewel in Africa - our great Zimbabwe!
God bless you all and
God bless Zimbabwe.
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