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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
How Morgan lost out
Mandy Rossouw
and Jason Moyo, Mail & Guardian (SA)
September 21, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-09-21-how-morgan-lost-out
A hard look
at Zimbabwe's settlement agreement
shows that MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai succeeded in winning none
of the demands he initially insisted were deal breakers.
On paper the agreement
looks fair enough. It splits executive authority between Tsvangirai
and Robert Mugabe and even gives the former -- long the nemesis
of the security forces -- a seat on the newly formed National Security
Council (NSC), intended to replace the much-feared Joint Operations
Command.
While Tsvangirai initially
demanded the right to chair Cabinet, the agreement now gives him
the post of deputy chairperson.
He wanted the majority
of Cabinet ministries, but the agreement gives Zanu-PF 15 Cabinet
seats, Tsvangirai's faction 13 and Arthur Mutambara's MDC splinter
faction three.
Mugabe's major concession
was that, for most of his functions, he must work on the advice
of Cabinet or Tsvangirai -- but nothing compels him to take their
advice. Mugabealso chairs the NSC, retaining full control of the
army, with the right to grant pardons and suspend sentences.
He may even dissolve
Parliament if he wants to, but must "consult" the Prime
Minister.
The agreement remains
vague about what will happen to rank-and-file Zanu-PF members who
ran amok in communities displacing and killing people.
For his meagre slice
of the executive pie Tsvangirai is left with all the work. He runs
government and therefore inherits a bankrupt and corrupt system
built on cronyism and illegal foreign currency trading.
His success will be acutely
measurable in terms of the inflation rate, growth rate, value of
the currency, foreign investment and donor funding.
Failure to put Zimbabwe
on the course to fiscal stability will be there for all to see.
It is his first go at
power and, with an eye on the next elections, he will be anxious
to appear competent at running government.
In contrast the only
thing Mugabe needs to do is ensure political stability, a less daunting
task.
The deal acknowledges
that the core problem which set off Zimbabwe's downward spiral was
Mugabe's seizure of white farmland, which was then distributed to
war veterans and his cronies.
The status quo will persist
with the duty of compensation imposed on Britain. A land commission
will audit ownership, ostensibly to guard against multiple farm
ownership.
Justifying the arrangement
Tsvangirai said this week he does not support the wholesale return
of land to white farmers. "Land should not be about white farmers
or black farmers," he said.
The wholesale return
of white farmers would meet with stiff resistance from the estimated
400 000 families and war veterans resettled on formerly white-held
land.
One major coup is the
prominence the agreement gives to women's rights.
It states that women
should have equal access to land and representation at Cabinet level.
A mechanism is to be
set up to advise the authorities on how to achieve "national
healing".
Given that the agreement
skirts the issue of perpetrators of violence -- assigning "joint
liability" for the violence -- this may be the only opportunity
for victims to confront the horrors of the Mugabe era.
Tsvangirai resisted pressure
to prosecute Mugabe, but he has not ruled out the prosecution of
lower-level perpetrators of violence.
Tsvangirai said: "I
don't think Mugabe himself, as a person, can be held accountable.
But there are various levels of institutional violence that have
taken place and I'm sure we'll be able to look at that."
A referendum on a new
Constitution will be held in 18 months and this will be the true
test of the commitment of the ruling party to the deal.
After Mugabe lost the
constitutional referendum of 2000 he unleashed the full power of
the state to ensure Zimbabweans did not defy him again.
A national youth-training
programme is also provided for, presumably to keep the violent youth
militia occupied.
The only provision on
the media, which Mugabe has subjected to stringent curbs, is a clause
requiring the closure of radio stations funded by foreign governments.
Although it says all
applications for media licences must be "processed immediately",
the agreement does not explicitly guarantee the unfettered operation
of the media.
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