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Mugabe/Tsvangirai v Mbeki/Zuma
Mutumwa
Mawere, Harare Tribune
September 22, 2008
View article
on the Harare Tribune website
With the world mired
in a complex financial crisis and world markets in a free fall,
Zimbabwe in a never ending political power drama, the African National
Congress' (ANC) National Executive Committee (NEC) resolved on Saturday
to ask President Mbeki, the SADC appointed mediator to the Zimbabwean
political crisis, to step down as the country's head of state and
government.
The Zimbabwean situation
has its own dynamics and characters but to the extent that the post
colonial experience in Africa seems to follow a predictable and
consistent path, it is important to pause and think seriously about
the inherently flawed political and economic foundational principles
of many post colonial states and what, if any, is required to move
the agenda for change and progress forward in the continent.
Notwithstanding
the universally acknowledged governance challenges and crisis facing
Zimbabwe, President Mbeki who has positioned himself as the champion
of democracy, revolutionary political morality, due process, and
economic progress, has presided over negotiations that have produced
a somewhat ambiguous and confusing agreement
in which President Mugabe and ZANU-PF find themselves after a humiliating
electoral defeat as the head of government and state and ruling
party, respectively, with no visible economic rescue plan.
President Mugabe stands
accused of using state power to entrench not only himself but also
his party in control of the country while the economy has been in
a free fall and more fundamentally a broken political system with
no respect for property and human rights and where the rule of law
has been displaced by rule of one strong man.
President Mugabe's approach
to governance has been compared to President Mbeki who has been
a central and key architect of the post apartheid administration
and it has been observed that both individuals share a common work
ethic and worldview. They both hold the view that they know better
how their countries should be governed and who should govern them.
President Mugabe has
never hidden his contempt for Tsvangirai even after publicly acknowledging
that his party had been humiliated at the last election. He simply
has not accepted Tsvangirai's credentials as meeting what he personally
has defined as the minimum required to take the position of head
of state and government.
Last week began with
the signing of the historic power sharing agreement and it was evident
from President Mugabe's speech that he is not prepared to hand the
baton to Tsvangirai. This position was reinforced later during the
week when he addressed the party's central committee and at the
end of the week it became obvious that the construction of the power
sharing deal was not only faulty but to ZANU-PF and President Mugabe
it represented nothing more than a power accommodation gimmick to
placate the office bearers of the opposition by giving them positions
in the state.
On patriotism, sovereignty,
economic empowerment, revolutionary morality, values and principles,
it appears that Presidents Mbeki and Mugabe have the same outlook.
In asking his deputy to resign in 2005, President Mbeki used the
argument that the conviction of Zuma's financial advisor, Mr. Shabil
Shaik, on corruption charges left him no choice but to take action.
However, the construction
of the case against Zuma against the contestations for power in
the ANC had a political tone primarily given that the allegations
had nothing to do with the adjudication of the controversial defense
contracts but rather with the alleged attempt by a French company
that won one of the contracts to use Zuma to stop the parliamentary
investigations.
President Mbeki as has
been the case with his colleagues in cabinet has repeatedly made
the point that allegations of corruption in the adjudication of
the defense contracts was baseless and uninformed and yet made no
attempt to clarify the precise nature of Zuma's alleged misconduct.
If President Mbeki had any choice, it has always been evident that
Zuma's name would never feature and yet the members of the ANC felt
otherwise.
Equally, in the Zimbabwean
case, President Mugabe has no respect for Tsvangirai as a leader
let alone the members of the opposition and yet the majority of
the people of Zimbabwe feel more secure with Tsvangirai at the helm
than Mugabe. What does this tell us about African politics? An argument
was made during the colonial era that giving blacks the right to
vote would not necessarily improve their lot but what was required
was a responsible government composed of individuals who shared
a common value system.
Clearly Mugabe and Tsvangirai
do not share a common value system. Although on paper, Mugabe subscribes
to a socialist philosophy, his administration's policies and programs
have hurt the working people more than the few rich people in the
country. He has consistently refused to take any responsibility
for the economic quagmire but it must be obvious to all that any
change without accountability amounts to no change.
Equally, the preamble
of the power sharing deal exposes the agreement's shortcomings,
in that, by acknowledging that the land issue is not reversible
it may be difficult to establish a correct moral compass for defining
what is the minimum acceptable standards of conduct by state actors.
Impunity can easily create its own life and momentum. The fate of
Mbeki demonstrates what kind of outcome can come when a leader loses
touch with his constituency and the importance of the governed taking
action to protect their own future.
In the case of South
Africa, the fight to remove Mbeki using Zuma's case has been motivated
more by a belief that the policies of Mbeki have been anti-working
class and poor. Although Mbeki and his supporters will continue
to argue that the transfer of power will not be in the national
interest and represents the unintended consequences of unguided
democracy, on reflection he may come to the conclusion that stubbornness
has its own consequences.
Mugabe must be happy
at the unfolding events of last week. With Mbeki down and the Zimbabwean
transition in limbo, he remains standing after the storm dictating
the agenda for change. Now the stalemate is on who is in what position
in a government that Charamba has already described as a ZANU-PF
administration with opposition personalities as spectators. Instead
of real change, it appears that the outcome of weeks of negotiations
may not be change that is believable.
The change in South Africa
is real and President Mbeki came to a realization it was Zuma time
and more importantly that the party's future was more important
than the personal interests of the parties concerned. Rightly or
wrongly, the majority of the membership of the party came to the
conclusion that the state was being used to settle personal scores.
The propensity to use the state machinery for personal benefit is
not restricted to South Africa but one must accept that the ANC
has led the way by unseating a head of state using party structures
and rules in a manner that will have ramifications for other African
countries including Zimbabwe.
Equally, the manner in
which President Mbeki has responded is instructive not only because
when the writing was on the wall he was quick to know what time
it was. What would have to happen in Zimbabwe for President Mugabe
to know it is time for real and fundamental change? It took the
concerted action of the ANC from 2005 to last week to voice their
concern about the danger of centralization of power and the propensity
to use such power for evil.
If President Mbeki is
a champion of good political moral values then why has he been silent
on the obvious abuses of power? On Zuma, President Mbeki would like
the world to know that he is a victim of political thuggerism for
trying to protect the republic from corrupt leaders but surprisingly
in constructing the power sharing deal not much thought and consistency
seems to have been important in dealing with Mugabe's abuse of the
state including victimizing the opposition.
South Africa's economy
is in a stronger position but real danger exists that populism can
have its own life and ultimately the country's future may easily
be sacrificed by ideological confusion and manipulation. Regrettably,
after 14 years in power 9 of which were as President, Mbeki must
accept responsibility for helping create a party that lacks the
values that he preaches. The behavior of the MDC supporters and
legislators is now being raised as a stumbling block to nation building
without critically examining who has been in charge of the country
for the past 28 years and under whose watch political morality has
deteriorated to a level where the centre can no longer hold.
Both Mbeki and Mugabe
were privileged to define the content and character of post-colonial
politics but both failed to show by example to the extent that credibility
has been squandered. They both continue to advance arguments of
ideological purity ignoring the challenges that confront their countries
and respective political parties.
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