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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: Failing better?
David Moore,
Concerned African Scholars
January 03, 2008
http://concernedafricascholars.org/zimbabwe-failing-better/
The words of
Samuel Beckett-s Worstward Ho fit Zimbabwe. If the process
of 'democratisation-, liberalisation, and all those
other aspects of capitalist modernity is 'westward,-
then Zimbabwe under a challenged Mugabe has been heading there in
almost the worst conceivable way. But for the democrats struggling
to enlarge their space the words of the ultimate tragic optimist
are appropriate too. More than three decades (including the liberation
war after the mid-seventies) under Mugabe have meant those attempting
to widen space for their democratic desires being doomed to repeat
Beckett-s injunction: "ever tried? Ever failed? No matter,
try again, fail again, Fail better".(1) It-s hard not
to "throw up for good" in such a struggle, but they
haven-t yet. The problem, though, is finding a way to combine
parliamentary and extra-parliamentary roads to that end.(2)
As these words
were written Zimbabwe was on the edge of another of its many historical
precipices. Mid September-s high hopes for a transitional
government based on the Agreement
between the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)
and the Two Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Formations, on
Resolving the Challenges Facing Zimbabwe had seemed to come to naught.
Yet there had been hope. Zimbabwe-s two main parties (and
the third, a small splinter of the Movement for Democratic Change
— MDC-M, led by once radical university student Arthur Mutambara)
signed the settlement on September 11. A huge SADC procession four
days later poured praise on SADC-s facilitator Thabo Mbeki
for pulling the hare out of the hat, and appeared to add enough
pomp and circumstance to satisfy Mugabe-s royal pretensions.
Many thought it would mark the beginning of his end, even if it
fell far short of registering the full extent of changes in Zimbabwe-s
democratic contours since the MDC had been struggling for its due
share of power in 1999. To be sure, warnings ensued from the National
Constitutional Assembly-s Lovemore Maduku that the accord
was 'more of capitulation by the MDC than by ZANU-PF-
that only gave 'cosmetic executive authority- for Tsvangirai
(3), and the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions thought it wasn-t worth its paper.
A hard front in the MDC led reportedly by Secretary-General Tendai
Biti (also a former student radical) took its cue from civil society,
opposing the parliamentarians who-d very much have liked to
get down to work — and continue to get paid: by the end of
October their salaries in a non-functioning parliament were only
worth US$10 a month. Harare sources claimed that Mutambara had joined
his old university chum to call for abandoning the deal, although
his partners Welshman Ncube and Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga,
who led the 2005 split away from Tsvangirai and later invited Mutambara
back from his American pursuits of robotic science and historically
devoted to parliament at any cost, would presumably be against that
strategy. It could be that the volatile Mutambara, badly bruised
by appearing to be a Mugabe acolyte during the pre-settlement conjuncture,
was recouping his student-civil society credentials.(4)
The MPs were
sitting on the cusp of a significant victory: Mugabe had unilaterally
called parliament — now structured by the March 29 MDC victory
that even the ZANU-PF biased Zimbabwe Electoral Commission could
not fix, after five weeks of trying (5) ) — to sit in late
August, hoping an MDC-M candidate for speaker would cause some friction
on its August 23-s election. But some MDC-M members voted
against their candidate, as did a few from ZANU-PF. The MDC-T-s
National Chairman Lovemore Moyo won the speaker-s prize with
110 votes of the assembly-s 210. Some of these votes weren-t
quite private, given that many MPs waved their marked ballots to
all and sundry (thus inciting Independent MP Jonathan Moyo, ZANU-PF-s
former propaganda chief, to file an application to the High Court
against it), and it has been said that a few were paid for by Freedom
House-s Orange revolutionaries: nevertheless they constituted
something of parliamentary coup. Democracy seemed to be on a roll.
Of course there
was no doubt that the September 11 settlement signified dual power,
not shared power. Sharing would be too warm and fuzzy a concept
to describe the feelings between the MDC and ZANU-PF after an eight
and a half year campaign in which the latter used every dirty trick
in the book, and invented new ones when those ran out. But in spite
of awkward notions such as giving Morgan Tsvangirai prime ministerial
'executive power- over a cabinet 'council-
which was actually the same as the cabinet over which Mugabe would
preside, and creating two deputy prime ministers from the MDCs to
match Mugabe-s two vice-presidents, there was a decent core
to the 18 or more month transitional scheme. The drafting of the
accord was almost half and half MDC liberal humanism ("DETERMINED
to act in a manner that demonstrates respect for the democratic
values of justice, fairness, openness, tolerance, equality, respect
of all persons and human rights" and "to build a society
free of violence, fear, intimidation, hatred, patronage, corruption
and founded on justice, fairness, openness, transparency, dignity
and equality") side by side with ZANU-PFist nationalism ("RECOGNISING
and accepting that the Land Question has been at the core of the
contestation in Zimbabwe", noting "the present economic
and political isolation of Zimbabwe by the United Kingdom, European
Union, United States of America and other sections of the International
Community" and that "the primary obligation of compensating
former land owners for land acquired rests on the former colonial
power" (6)), but a momentum borne by that intangible concept
of political 'will- might have carried it on beyond
the hackneyed past. If the MDC-T and MDC-M could have co-operated
they-d have held a fragile one-seat majority in cabinet and
parliament (and it was expected the 'appointments- to
Senate and governorships would be even-handed). There would have
been economic and military councils, and a widely consultative process
to create a new constitution on which the National Constitutional
Assembly, which started the whole process of constitutional democratisation
back in 1998, started work immediately on that score. As well, a
Periodic Review Mechanism, consisting of two members from each party,
signified equal weighting (although one can argue that the Mutambara
faction may not 'really- deserve equality at such a
level, having only gained 10 seats and 4.83% of the March 29 vote,)
on final say.
Even the naysayers
seemed to think there-d be a fair sharing of important cabinet
posts. The MDC, it was agreed — but never signed — had
secured the departments of Home Affairs, Justice, Finance and Information
Ministries while ZANU-PF retained Defence, Agriculture, Mines and
Prisons. An MDC MP with a long tradition in the labour unions, eager
to take up his new legislative seat, opined 'we are not at
war: Mugabe can keep the army;- when queried on rumours that
Anglo-American and the like had pushed hard for the deal —
any deal! — in fear of heightened British sanctions, he joked
'I hope they sponsor my football team.- Even the caustic
RW Johnson was buoyed by the prospect of imperial intervention:
he declared that the trusty Brits would ride in to rectify the military.(7)
The crazed Gideon Gono would be no longer chair of the Reserve Bank,
so the donors- "Fishmongers" plan (named after
the Harare restaurant in which the usual suspects met to draft tough
IMF-style shock therapy with lots of humanitarian band-aids) would
cool an inflation rate that as of mid-October was 231,000,000%.
With the help of a billion and a half dollars of aid, Zimbabwe would
soon reach its (mythical) historical status of 'breadbasket-
state. As if immaculately conceived, a 240 page 'discussion
document- authored by a UNDP team ranging from University
of Zimbabwe Management Studies professor Tony Hawkins on the
right to former Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) economist
Godfrey Kanyenze on the left was unveiled, promising economic nirvana
(if heaven was last seen in 1991) in 12 years if growth could average
five per cent annually. The 'manufactured in Zimbabwe-
Comprehensive Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe(8) struck radical political
economist Patrick Bond as 'neo-liberal-, perhaps because
it said that Zimbabwe is not ready for a 'developmental state-,
while John Robertson, an economist of more orthodox bent, said it
would only serve to breed bureaucrats. On signing, Tsvangirai said
to the sceptical Sunday Independent reporter that he had to give
the 'benefit of the doubt- to the man who had so often
labelled him as Blair-s tea-boy and an ignorant 'chematama-
(fat-face).(9)
Yet by November
it looked as if none of this would come to pass. For some reason
Tsvangirai had buckled to the SADC negotiator-s 'don-t
worry: crisis what crisis?- attitude to the construction of
the cabinet (along with just about everything else in Zimbabwe)
and failed to gain guarantees on the distribution of posts. Thabo
Mbeki, known to harbour a pungent dislike for Tsvangirai ("he
could never lead Zimbabwe to liberation", he-s reported
to have said) must have foreseen his unceremonious sacking back
home at the hands of the ANC-s Zuma gang, so pushed Tsvangirai
to accept empty promises about that cabinet. Mugabe, who as ex-guerrilla
leader (thrown into jail from 1977 to 1980 by Mugabe and Samora
Machel for seeming to be a threat to the former) and now co-leader
of the oppositional Zimbabwe Liberation Veterans- Forum Wilfred
Mhanda says will take the 1% of a deal that looks 99% against him
and win, was soon to deny the MDC-s place at the table. Beholden
to the prospects of losing control of the ZANU-PF congress in December,
and tied to a rejectionist camp led by Emmerson Mnangagwa (infamous
for his role as head of security in the Gukurahundi that claimed
thousands of lives as ZANU-PF forced Joshua Nkomo-s Zimbabwe
African People-s Union to enter into a unity pact that no
one wants to see repeated now: ZAPU was swallowed whole) he could
not summon the strength to deprive any of his ministers of a place
around the trough. Cutting a cabinet of thirty in half is not an
easy task: nor is giving up the military or finance. The former
keeps opposition in check and precludes justice for sins of the
past; the latter keeps the official rate of exchange alive and thus
the main channel of corruption (it takes about four billion Zimbabwean
dollars to buy one American one on the parallel market, but only
ten thousand if one has access to the official rate!).
A Harare story
that Mnangagwa pushed the unelected Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa
(who in 2002 had, with the active encouragement of perhaps the only
foreign policy-maker in South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, entered into
heavy negotiations with then MDC Secretary-General Welshman Ncube,
thus nicely the sewing lines of division in the MDC that contributed
to its split in 2005), and was severely beaten by Mugabe-s
bodyguards, indicates the strains in the ruling party that is governing
less and less every day. The popular exaggeration of the rumour,
that had Mnangagwa pushing Mugabe, was squelched by one man who
knows Mugabe well: if that had happened, he said, Mnangagwa would
now be dead. Mugabe himself has admitted publicly that he fears
rebellion from within.(10) Mugabe remembers the mid-1970s divisions
in ZANU very well, and probably après moi, la deluge, not
quite realising the storms have been pelting for nearly a decade.
Thus on October
12, a day after the three main protagonists in the prolonged haggling
over dividing the cabinet positions agreed to call in Private Citizen
Mbeki, in need of consultancy fees during his forced retirement,
ZANU-PF announced the cabinet: Defence, Home Affairs, Justice, Media
and Higher Education (those pesky students have to be watched) would
be all for the ruling party, while the two MDCs were thrown the
crumbs with economic reconstruction and social welfare functions
— not good candidates for winning an election in a few years
sans the donors pitching in for a government that is not even plus
ça change. Finance was unresolved: perhaps that was left
to the itinerant negotiator to assign. Tsvangirai addressed an October
12 rally saying that unless Home Affairs would be in his hands,
the deal would be off. He was facing a split in his party: some
said that only a demand for a new national election would save the
MDC-T face. In the meantime, concerned activists were consulting
the SADC (Southern African Development Community) and AU (African
Union) diplomats persuading them to call an emergency summit. The
Zimbabwe Liberation Veterans- Forum, made up of war veterans
opposed to their peers who allied with Mugabe in the hopes they-d
get some free land, appealed to the AU and SADC to let go of the
lame-duck mediator and get a new process rolling. The ZLVF wondered
"what informs the position of SADC leaders by conferring legitimacy
to a rogue president whose hands drip with the blood of his own
people and not of his imagined enemies from the West." (11)
As expected,
the October 13-15 meetings mediated by South Africa-s past
president resolved only that the MDC could take Finance for its
troubles. Somewhere along the line it was proposed that Home Affairs
be split: the MDC could take immigration functions while the guys
with guns would be in the violent party-s hands. No deal:
and Tsvangirai seemed to be gaining ground. Denied a passport for
months (Home Affairs says there is no paper, but swimming star Kirsten
Coventry got one in days and civil servants say the document is
sitting in a desk) he refused to take emergency travel documents
enabling him to attend the October 20 meeting of the SADC security
troika+1 (Chair, South Africa; members, Angola, Mozambique and Swaziland)
in Mbabane. And so, as the summer begins in southern Africa, millions
of Zimbabweans are dying faster than ever before and the MDC ups
the ante to SADC as a whole (to meet in South Africa in the first
week of November), then the AU, and then elections to be monitored
by the UN.
The time for
such an intervention whilst thousands were beginning to starve as
never before, would be, however, far too long. Kwashiorkor, Pellagra
(an adult form of malnutrition leading to madness and death) and
Marasmus stalked the land: estimates were that five million would
be in danger of starvation by January 2009. The senior doctors are
bought off: as Jan Raath wrote, in September the Reserve Bank bought
imported cars for the hundred or so of them. The cost? US$5 million.(12)
The state had no funds to run examinations for its schools; and
towards the end of October it recalled all government vehicles from
their temporary users.
A new election
could bring hope or more despair. There are indications that this
is what the Mnangagwa faction wants. They will take complete power
in the December ZANU-PF congress and resort again to the Gukurahundi
tactics that raised their head in the weeks before the June 27 non-election
to such an extent that Tsvangirai withdrew. This line of thought
predicts that the MDC will be destroyed so they had better sign
a deal now.
On the other
hand, if the UN could rise out of its bureaucratic lethargy and
run a real election — something that, if it had taken place
more than half a decade ago, might have solved the problem in the
making — the humanitarian aid would flow in. Millions of lives
could be saved, and more than a modicum of democracy could creep
in. However, the UN is not well-known for doing much of anything
in Africa — is the Democratic Republic of the Congo a success
story? — although, ironically, one of its more successful
elections was managed by Zimbabwean professor of law Reg Austin,
in Cambodia in 1992. If one writes off the UN, only the settlement
is left. The MDC would like two years to let the Economic Council
bring a material base back in, and the constitution could be debated
vigorously.
Joshua Bakacheza,
an MDC activist, was abducted by men in a truck on 25 June 2008
in Msasa, Harare and shot in the head a few hours later, according
to his colleague who survived a bullet to the head and the lungs
in the same incident. Bakacheza-s body was discovered lying
in the open on 5 July, after a search of ten days. This pattern
of abduction and subsequent murder account for 45 known deaths during
April-June 2008.(13)
Could a wounded
Mbeki magically wave his wand to solve all this? Could SADC? The
AU? Resorting to fantasy in something approaching an 'academic-
article illustrates the surreal nature of Zimbabwe now. The fact
that senior doctors drive around in hypocritical abuse of their
Hippocratic Oath while grown men and women place their faith in
an Aids-denialist brings us back to Beckett and his tradition. Such
tragedies take us back to the world of literature, a salvation in
Africa-s perpetual crisis. This time, a leading MDC politician
still under treason charges invokes African writers to state his
position. Tendai Biti, writing of the crisis in education, brings
Ngugi wa Thiongo-s brilliant The Wizard of the Crow to his
side: for him Ngugi-s 'Abhurian State- "brilliantly
describes" what happens to ruling classes and their empty
ideology of nationalism.
Faced with the
frustration of failing to transform the colonial state during the
national democratic stage of the struggle, nationalism degenerates
and decomposes into neo-patrimony, clientelism, the imperial presidency
and patronage. In short, it converts the state into a rogue state
where violence, corruption and personal accumulation become vehicles
for the continued reproduction of the state.
The Abhurian
State . . . had been fore-written by Chinua Achebe in A Man of
the People, Sembene Ousmane in The Last of the Empire and Ayi Kwei
Armah in The Beautyful Ones are Not Yet Born. At that stage, the
highest level of decomposition, nationalism needs to be saved from
itself or it will take the nation with it.
That is exactly
where Zimbabwe is at the present moment. ZANU-PF needs to be saved
from itself or it will annihilate the construct that Zimbabwe is.(14)
There is no
doubt that the energies consumed in ridding Zimbabwe of Mugabe could
be better spent elsewhere. If that one task could be achieved, it
may not be chimerical to advance the proposition that the edifice
he has built around himself would fall like a house of cards. One
can only hope, with Beckett, that Zimbabwe-s next failure
will be better than usual: the doctors- cars remind us, though,
that failure for some is success for others. Zimbabwe-s political
economy needs drastic overhauling, so those making new constitutions
in this interregnum — a space in which the wisdom of those
running the financial markets of the world is seen to be equivalent
to Robert Mugabe-s — must constitute a new economy too.
Notes
- Samuel Beckett,
Worstward Ho, London: John Calder, 1983. The 'tragic optimist-
school of African studies is epitomised by Christopher Cramer-s
exceptional Civil War is Not a Stupid Thing: Accounting for Violence
in Developing Countries, London: Hurst & Co, 2006 (its Indiana
University Press version is more boringly called Violence in Developing
Countries: War, Memory, Progress).
- David Moore
and Tapera Kapuya 'Zimbabwe-s Opposition Now: The
Parliamentary Road or Mass Action on the Streets?- Global
Dialogue, 10, 2 (August 2005), pp. 4-9.
- Basildon
Peta, 'Tsvangirai confident that deal will work-,
Sunday Independent (Johannesburg), September 14, 2008, Edn. 3.
- By the end
of October it was reported that the MDC was proposing to remove
the rival faction from the agreement. This was after Mutambara
had spoken in support of Morgan Tsvangirai-s decision not
to attend a Southern African Development Community meeting in
Mbabane called in the last week of October to settle the deal
(about which more later). Zimbabwean politics is nothing if not
volatile. Jason Moyo, 'MDC sets its sights on the UN-,
Mail & Guardian (Johannesburg) October 31-November 6, 2008,
p. 14.
- Susan Booyson,
'The Presidential and Parliamentary Elections in Zimbabwe,
March and June 2008-, Electoral Studies, 24, 4 (forthcoming
December 2008). See also Booysen-s authored Electoral Institute
of Southern Africa, The Zimbabwe Harmonised Elections of 29 March
2008, Presidential, Parliamentary and Local Government Elections
with Postscript on the Presidential Run-off of 27 June 2008 and
the Multi-Party Agreement of 15 September 2008, Electoral Institute
of Southern Africa Observer Mission Report No. 28, Johannesburg,
2008.
- The best
juxtaposition was this: the accord promised to "reject any
unlawful, violent, undemocratic and unconstitutional means of
changing governments" and also warned that "no outsiders
have a right to call or campaign for regime change in Zimbabwe".
- RW Johnson,
'Security is first test of Zimbabwe deal-, Sunday
Times (London), September 14, 2008.
- United Nations
Development Programme, Comprehensive Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe:
A Discussion Document, Harare, 2008.
- Peta, 'Tsvangirai
confident . . . .
- Jason Moyo,
'Mugabe Fears Zanu-PF Rebellion-, Mail & Guardian,
October 31-November 6, 2008, pp. 13-4.
- The Zimbabwe
Liberation Veterans- Forum, 'An Appeal for the African
Union to Intervene to Resolve the Zimbabwean Political Impasse-,
Harare: August 26 2008.
- Jan Raath,
'Aid agencies: 5m face starvation in Zimbabwe: Silently,
in rundown wards, starving children lie dying - malnutrition diseases
are overwhelming hospitals,- Times Online, October 14, 2008.
- Solidarity
Peace Trust, Desperately Seeking Sanity: What Prospects for a
New Beginning in Zimbabwe? (Solidarity Peace Trust, July 2008).
- Tendai Biti,
'MDC: Collapse of education system an indictment of ZANU
PF,- MDC Press Statement, October 13, 2008. On SW Radio
Africa, www.swradioafrica.com/pages/mdconeduc131008.htm.
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