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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
So what really was agreed at the talks?
Jupiter
Punungwe, The Zimbabwe Times
October 03, 2008
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=5344
Some people
have equated the recent Mbeki-mediated co-governance talks between
the MDC and Zanu-PF to the Lancaster House of 1979.
As we know, the 1979
talks led to some meaningful political change in 1980.
Personally I hold a very
dim view of the usefulness of the more recent talks to the ordinary
Zimbabwean. If anything will come out of the recent talks it will
be more by luck than by design.
In 1979 the Lancaster
House talks almost collapsed. This is famously epitomized by a picture
of grim faced Patriotic Front leaders who had staged a walk out.
One can also rightly argue that the recent talks had their moments
of drama and grim faced leaders huffing and puffing out of the negotiating
venue.
However a key difference
is the issues over which the drama happened at the two sets of talks.
The Lancaster House talks centred on matters of principle. The walk
out which resulted in the historically famous picture of Patriotic
Front leaders was over the issue of land redistribution, not who
was going to get what post.
At the end of the Lancaster
House talks the direction which the country was going to take was
very clear. Everybody knew there was going to be an election based
on the one man one vote principle.
Everybody knew that a
policy of equitable redistribution of resources including land was
supposed to be followed by whoever won the election. None of leaders
of the political movements of that era had been allocated any stone-cast
roles in the incoming government. No cabinet posts were allocated
in advance. The then Prime Minister Abel Muzorewa actually slipped
into political oblivion. If the talks had been held under the same
terms as those going on now he would probably have been guaranteed
a political life through having a 'senior' post reserved for him.
In contrast, at the recent
talks, issues of principle where conspicuous by their absence. Grim
faced charges out of the Rainbow Towers were over the sharing of
cabinet posts and power, not the settling of sticky points of principle.
All the major points of Zanu-PF misrule were left un-negotiated
with very vague mention of future agreements on the way forward.
A heavy smokescreen of obfuscation left many people trying to guess
what was really agreed.
The first thing you need
before embarking on a journey is to know where you want to go. Zanu-PF
and he MDC have been like a flight crew quarrelling about who is
going to be captain, who is going to be co-pilot who is going to
be part of the cabin crew. Yet they do not even know whether they
want to fly to Plumtree or to Nyamapanda, in the first place. They
just want to fly somewhere. If the two parties know what policies
they want to implement as a GNU, they have been doing an extremely
good job of not communicating those policies.
On the key point of economic
management for example, it is not clear whether the MDC is going
to have full say on the economic direction the country takes from
now on. All that is mentioned is that the MDC are going to be given
the ministry of finance and tasked with turning around the economy.
I understood that to mean that the MDC were going to be given responsibility
for sourcing funds from their western backers. Little of substance
was mentioned on critical economic management principles such as
unfettered free trade, accountability and a tough stance on corruption.
In fact indications are
that old Zanu-PF policies are going to continue with little modification.
Already the handout of free national resources (tractors) to cronies
has started. Attempts to enforce ludicrous and production stifling
price controls are continuing. Little attempt if any is being made
to stop access to state coffers by Zanu-PF bigwigs whose wanton
pillaging of state resources is the primary source of Zimbabwe's
economic problems. Big names in Zanu-PF, who are no longer big names
in national politics, because they no longer represent any constituencies,
continue to dictate matters ahead of the elected representatives
of the people.
In fact they are preposterously
demanding that they be accommodated in the new government with more
power than the elected representatives of the people from the MDC,
or those from their own party they consider 'junior'. Somebody must
remind them that the only 'senior' thing about politics in a democracy
is the number of people who vote for you. If the people at first
vote someone into power, who subsequently fail to serve the people's
interests, the people have an unfettered right to vote someone else
in. Historical votes are not a factor in democracy, only the current
mandate counts.
The old dogs have absolutely
no right to continue growling. They should tuck their tails between
their legs and slink into oblivion gracefully. If they want a chance
to come back as representatives of the people they should stop pushing
their potbellies around the corridors of government offices, where
they no longer belong, and go back to sweat and slave for the people
at grassroots level. This message also includes Tsvangirai because
although those from the MDC might hotly dispute it, the fact is
that he is not legally elected to represent anyone.
It is astounding when
people who spend decades in the bush fighting for one man one vote,
act in a way which clearly shows that they have no clue what one
man one vote is about. One man one vote is about testing the wishes
of the people periodically and following those wishes. Seeking to
qualify one man one vote with some system of perceived political
seniority is a departure from democracy, and we the ordinary Zimbabweans
should never, ever accept such qualification. A person's 'political
seniority' goes away the moment they lose the mandate to represent
the people.
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