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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
No to the power-sharing deal! No to collusion with the Mugabe dictatorship!
Dale Doré
January 29, 2009
After Mugabe
had sworn himself in as President, the MDC entered negotiations
for a power-sharing agreement in good faith. In September 2008 the
MDC was pressured by Mbeki into a deeply flawed agreement.
Yet the MDC signed it in a spirit of cooperation and to ease the
desperate plight of the people; Mugabe did precisely the opposite.
The hate campaign, the abductions, the grabbing of key ministries,
the unilateral appointment of Mugabe loyalists to key government
positions, the final collapse of the currency, the cholera epidemic
- all done in utter disregard for the MDC and the long-suffering
people of Zimbabwe. Mugabe spits in our faces. Yet, for all his
loathing and contempt for the MDC and its leaders, there are those
in the opposition who still believe that a deal with Mugabe is their
only option. Instead of believing in themselves, they believe in
Mugabe-s omnipotence. Instead of sticking to their democratic
principles as the route to legitimate political power, they believe
that power can be shared with Mugabe. Instead of believing themselves
to be the true heirs of democratically-won political power, they
fear that Mugabe will form a government without them. Until and
unless the MDC believe in themselves and move boldly to capture
the high moral and political ground - nothing will change.
Mugabe has now woven his spell around the SADC leadership. Despite
the fact that SADC did not recognise the Presidential run-off in
June 2008, in which Mugabe declared himself the winner, they still
accord him a place at the high table of SADC meetings as "HE
President Robert Gabriel Mugabe" and as "Head of State".
Morgan Tsvangirai is merely referred to as "Prime Minister
Designate". SADC have accepted nearly all the unilateral decisions
taken by Mugabe after he acted in complete contradiction to the
letter and spirit of the September agreement. Even after Mugabe
illegitimately grabbed the lion-s share of power, SADC has
still put their trust in him to negotiate in good faith when implementing
the power-sharing agreement. Instead of fair and unbiased arbitration,
Mbeki and the SADC leaders have now placed the MDC in a lose-lose
situation. If the MDC pulls out of the agreement, they will look
like the spoilers. If they enter the agreement, they will be completely
dominated by the very forces they oppose and make them complicit
in Mugabe-s dictatorship. However, our first responsibility
is not to Thabo Mbeki or leaders of other countries. We must not
sign any agreement to appease Mugabe, Mbeki or SADC. Our responsibility
is first and foremost to the people of Zimbabwe. Having tried our
utmost, but having failed to reach agreement, we must now put aside
any kind of power-sharing deal, including that which SADC has put
on the table. A bold, new approach is needed.
Such an approach begins with a belief in ourselves and the justice
of our cause. Above all, we should not fear SADC allowing Mugabe
to form a government without the MDC. They must be reminded that
they are in no position to do so. SADC themselves accepted the outcome
of the March 2008 election which was won by the MDC and Morgan Tsvangirai.
Mugabe lost. SADC themselves rejected the outcome of the one-horse
Presidential Election in June 2008, in which Mugabe pronounced and
anointed himself winner. SADC is required to pass the matter back
to the AU from whence its authority was derived. But imagine if
SADC did give Mugabe the go-ahead to form a new government. Then
let us challenge Mugabe to do so! It would be a government that
is illegitimate in the eyes of the people, of Africa and the entire
international community; a government that is weakened with no money
to pay its civil service, its police or soldiers; a government that
would receive no international assistance, except for humanitarian
aid; and it would be a government deprived of the legitimacy that
MDC would give it! We need not worry if SADC gives its blessing
to a Mugabe government, but treat it with the derision it deserves.
Having been asked to sign up to a deal that bears no resemblance
to the September 2008 accord, the MDC should declare, that despite
its best efforts, it has been unable to reach an agreement with
Mugabe that does justice to their election victory or ease the suffering
of the Zimbabwe people. They should declare that there will be no
further negotiations on sharing power. Instead the MDC should approach
the African Union to settle the dispute democratically - by
holding new elections. The MDC should ask the AU to invite the United
Nations to supervise the poll to ensure that it meets the exacting
SADC standards for free and fair elections. A fundamental requirement
will be to deploy an UN/AU peace keeping force at least three months
ahead of the elections to ensure that the electoral process is administratively
efficient and fair, allow normal political activity, and provide
the people of Zimbabwe with the security and confidence to vote
for a candidate of their choice. Equally important, there should
be a UN/AU diplomatic and security presence at least one month after
the election to ensure the orderly transfer of power.
This has a number of advantages. The first is that the undemocratic
and deeply flawed power-sharing deal is substituted by the democratic
will of the people. There is no need for fudging, counter-accusations,
re-negotiation and stalling over the allocation of ministries and
the sharing of power. Second, it would provide an exit strategy
for SADC and the AU from a deal that Mugabe signed but never accepted,
that has divided the members of SADC, and that has made African
leaders look weak and indecisive in the face of an African dictatorship.
Elections would not only enable SADC to unify around electoral principles
to which they have all signed up, but it would find common ground
with the UN and the international community. And, third, it allows
the very important constitution making process to be delayed until
after the elections, as was the case in South Africa. This means
that those tasked with redrafting a 'people-driven-
constitution are the true epresentatives of the people. Any attempt
to draw up a constitution now would be so compromised by political
bargaining that it would be completely untenable as the supreme
law of the country.
The last vestiges of any faith that power can be shared with Mugabe
have gone. We must move on.
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