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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Key ministries' myth divorced from people's plight
Joram Nyathi,
New Zimbabwe
October 21, 2008
http://newzimbabwe.com/pages/joram34.18920.html
When the political
deal to
resolve Zimbabwe's crisis was signed on September 15, I said nothing
spectacular could come out of desperate people; such people are
incapable of acts of greatness.
Add to this intra-party
fighting for portfolios and inter-party mistrust and you will understand
the stalemate over "key" ministries.
The debate on the issue
is confused. When at first MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai refused
to sign the deal, he was hailed as a hero. We were told without
his signature, there was no deal because there would be no foreign
aid.
A month after he signed,
there is no money and the tune has changed to infantile retreat:
he shouldn't have signed the deal before the ministries were allocated.
(It is as if people are still nursing a hangover from boycott politics).
Foreign money will be
long in coming. Those who had pledged rescue packages are keen to
show it is they who hold the key. They have an excuse for not releasing
it by pretending nothing has happened since 1998 although Zanu PF
and the MDC have agreed land reform is irreversible
Add to this disconnect
the creeping recession after the Wall Street bloodbath and the rest
of Europe and you know we are alone for the long haul.
In declaring a deadlock
over the sharing of portfolios last week, Tsvangirai said there
was no agreement on any ministry. He denied President Mugabe's view
that the dispute was over two "key" ministries of finance
and home affairs. Previously the list included foreign affairs,
information, local government and defence.
My idea is that the strategic
nature of a ministry and the resources allocated to it should be
determined based on national development goals such as better health,
food, education, housing, sanitation and clean water for the people!
Having thus reasoned,
and convinced the MDC wanted to improve people's welfare, I thought
they would focus first on social ministries where need is greatest.
Isn't that where all the maladies are most manifest?
Does alleviating people's
misery depend on a party's ability to arrest, to declare war and
peace, to set up diplomatic missions abroad and to spread propaganda?
What could be more exciting
for a new minister than getting the agriculture portfolio where
all the machinery has already been provided? What could be more
uplifting than to see that sector turned around over the next two
seasons and ensure Zimbabwe is able to feed itself, export maize,
cotton and tobacco once again?
Local government is not
about Ignatious Chombo imposing unelected Zanu PF councillors on
local authorities. It is about service delivery. People want clinics,
houses, market stalls, lighting, water and safe roads and clean
cities. A political party with people-centred policies would die
to expose Zanu PF's incompetence by restoring the beauty of our
towns.
Who is better placed
to win votes in the next elections than the man who turns around
the collapsing health sector? The infrastructure hasn't completely
collapsed in most hospitals. With resources, we don't need miracle
workers to get things working again. The same can be said of education
which has been hard hit by the depletion of resources and the brain
drain. What is needed are packages of incentives to woo back our
teachers, lecturers, doctors, nurses and engineers.
Take rural housing and
social amenities. Isn't that a windfall for any political party?
That is where 75% of the population lives. Who would lose a national
election again after building one's political base there providing
desperately needed low-cost housing, toilets, boreholes, accommodation
for teachers, the police, chiefs and headmen? Who would lose a vote
with women and the youth on his side given that the combined groups
constitute the majority of voters in any national election?
My observations are based
on the understanding that ministries propose the budgets they want,
lobby fellow MPs and get the resources they need. In our situation
where Zanu PF and the MDC share MPs almost 50-50, I don't see how
a ministry's request can be blocked on the basis of which party
holds it and how controlling the army or police can resolve that.
I chose the social ministries
believing that our political leaders are acting in good faith and
in the best interest of the people; and also that political power
derives from the people through performance, not from the barrel
of the gun. For if real power can be contemplated only within the
oppressive state institutions set up in the Rhodesian era, what
transition is there to talk about?
The myth of "key"
ministries is interesting. First, it is completely divorced from
the people's plight, hence the lack of urgency among the principals.
It puts the spotlight on their mutual mistrust, which has coalesced
into paralysing paranoia. Each suspects the other is plotting an
ambush for it around the corner.
Second, it is based on
a debatable postulate that a ministry is strategic per se outside
an exigency which necessitates the mobilisation and deployment of
national resources through its structures, such as war, famine or
disease outbreak. Beside health and police, there is no indispensable
ministry. Why in a democracy should one government ministry be special
to any political party beside bargaining for individual-specific
posts?
Third, nothing suggests
that either Zanu PF or the MDC wants defence or home affairs portfolios
for anything other than as instruments of coercion. They seem to
have endorsed Mugabe's belief that not only should you use force
if necessary to get into power but that the gun must be "its
security officer -- its guarantor".
The tussle is as if Tsvangirai
as prime minister will be in charge of only MDC ministers operating
outside cabinet consensus. A deal between two or more people can
only be as bad or good as the desires of those who sign and implement
it. Until the principals put people at the centre, there will be
no end to areas of discord and Thabo Mbeki is no magician to cure
the mutual suspicion between them.
*Joram Nyathi
is the deputy editor of the Zimbabwe Independent newspaper. E-mail
him at joram@zimind.co.zw
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