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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
Zimbabwe: Wrong way, right way
John Makumbe,
openDemocracy.net
February 03, 2009
Read
this article on the ISN website
The opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) decided
on 30 January 2009 to join a unity government for Zimbabwe in which
power will ostensibly be shared between Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF
and Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC. The long-delayed implementation of
a compromise agreement brokered on 15 September 2008 and now reinforced
by Zimbabwe's neighbors in the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) may seem a plausible answer to the country's economic collapse.
But the reality is that is has always been fatally flawed.
The majority
of Zimbabweans view with suspicion any political arrangement that
leaves Mugabe snugly in power as head of state and commander-in-chief
of the armed forces. The fact that the deal has not been implemented
since it was signed attests to its defective nature. Its limitations
were further confirmed by the fiasco of the talks in Harare on 19
January 2009 between Mugabe and Tsvangirai, even if the SADC leaders
- at their 26-27 January meeting in Pretoria - recommended
once again that it be enforced.
It is evident that the
agreement is unfairly advantageous to the incumbent president, for
it will enable Robert Mugabe to retain virtually all the executive
powers that he has wielded since coming to power in 1980 - even
though he lost the presidential election on 29 March 2008. It thus
denies Morgan Tsvangirai, the winner of that poll, the opportunity
to lead Zimbabwe out of the social and economic quagmire that Mugabe
has dragged it into through his iron-fist style of governance.
A journey
from ruin
There is another and
better way - one that is advocated by civil-society groups in Zimbabwe
- including human-rights organizations, trade unions, student movements
and others - and which offers a far better prospect than leaving
Robert Mugabe in power.
This is to create a transitional
authority that can manage national affairs for a set period of (for
example) eighteen months. During this time, this authority would
oversee the drafting and adoption of a democratic constitution,
after which democratic and internationally monitored elections would
be held. The transitional authority would then hand over power to
the legitimate winner of that election.
The civil-society groups
propose that the authority be as inclusive as possible; it would
include representatives of civic groups, churches, businesses, selected
professional bodies and political parties, and youth and women's
groups. An important aspect is that it is to comprise individuals
who had no intention of standing for the proposed elections after
the adoption of the new constitution.
The SADC has resisted
this proposal. Instead, it again backed the agreement between the
arch-rivals Mugabe and Tsvangirai that had been facilitated by South
Africa's then-president, Thabo Mbeki. It is reported on 1 February
2009 that the parliament in Harare is already considering key constitutional
amendments that will be rushed through in order to allow a coalition
government to be established. This would allow Tsvangirai to be
appointed prime minister by 11 February (according to the SADC timetable),
and an appeal to lift international sanctions on Zimbabwe to become
irresistible.
In these circumstances,
the rest of the international community should apply pressure on
the SADC to abandon the ill-fated mid-September agreement and embrace
the option of the national transitional authority as soon as possible.
The 18 months of transitional
governance of Zimbabwe would provide a desperately needed window
of opportunity through which regional and international assistance
could alleviate the multifaceted humanitarian catastrophe in Zimbabwe.
More and more people - 60,000 according to World Health Organisation
(WHO) estimates - are infected with cholera; at least 3,100 have
died of the disease during the outbreak that began in August 2008.
Over 80% of the population is poor and most cannot afford three
meals per day.
Almost all schools and
hospitals have closed - due both to lack of money to pay the teachers,
nurses and doctors, and to a lack of clean water, electricity and
medicine. Six of the seven state universities have remained closed
since the winter vacation in May 2008. In other words, there is
a whole generation of young people whose future now lies in real
danger, if not in ruins; and all because of Robert Mugabe.
The
party in power
Robert Mugabe and his
Zanu-PF will resist any move towards a transitional authority. They
are fully aware that handing over power to anyone, even a transitional
authority, would be tantamount to committing political suicide;
and that they can never win a free and fair election in Zimbabwe.
There will have to be political pressure on him to secure his consent
to an initiative that so many Zimbabweans support; and the leaders
of Zimbabwe's neighbors are among those who will have to exert it
if it is to succeed (see Roger Southall, "The politics of pressure:
the world and Zimbabwe," 28 June 2008).
The recent abductions
and illegal arrests of MDC activists by the notorious Central Intelligence
Organisation agents, coupled with flimsy allegations that the MDC
is operating militia training-bases in Botswana, are clear indications
that Mugabe and Zanu-PF are not negotiating in good faith. But such
repression is also effective in persuading the MDC leadership to
come to the view that a bad deal - such as the one they signed after
being cajoled, if not coerced, by Thabo Mbeki - is worse than no
deal.
The bottom line is that
Robert Mugabe and Zanu-PF have no intention of handing over power
to the MDC, except under severe political pressure from both within
and outside Zimbabwe. The activists gathering at the African Union
summit in Addis Ababa on 26 January-3 February 2009 to highlight
the "passive genocide" in their country are right; those
who are prepared to consent to a political fix that will entrench
its architects in power are wrong. The next few weeks will further
demonstrate Zanu-PF's desperation to stay in office at all costs.
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