|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Inclusive government - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Hoping for a miracle
Mary
Ndlovu, Pambazuka News
March 12, 2009
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/54746
The unholy alliance
between Zanu PF (Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic
Front) and the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has now lasted
four weeks. It has survived the arrest and continued incarceration
of a senior MDC leader, the failure by Zanu PF to implement major
clauses of the agreement on which it is based, and now a tragic
death which the majority of Zimbabweans believe to be a failed attempt
to assassinate Morgan Tsvangirai. During the past week, following
the death of Morgan-s wife Susan, the country held its collective
breath. The questions tormenting everyone are how much longer and
how many more shocks this government can stand.
A horse and
a donkey can be induced to mate, but the offspring is a stubborn,
sterile mule. Will the forced pairing of Zanu PF and the MDC last
long enough to produce any offspring at all?
Attempting to
predict the future in Zimbabwe is a risky proposition. Generally
we have become accustomed to dealing in 'scenarios-
- the various 'ifs- - starting with the
best case and proceeding to the worst case. And over the years we
have learned that it can always get worse, and it usually does.
Nevertheless, it appears that the power-sharing agreement -
for which the law has been contorted like a pretzel - despite
all its blemishes, may yet rescue us for the time being from a worse
predicament.
The MDC, in
both its formations, had little choice but to sign and enter into
a power-sharing arrangement with Zanu PF. Although many observers
and even participants urged caution until a fairer compromise had
been reached, the complete collapse of every service in Zimbabwe,
from schools to electricity to hospitals to sewage and even banks,
produced severe pressure from the ground.
Millions of
Zimbabweans, who so badly wanted a settlement, believed that the
MDC should take the risk of failing from inside a government rather
than becoming irrelevant outside, and eventually the leadership,
heavily pressured by the Southern African Development Community
(SADC), heard that cry and acted. But now that MDC is inside the
kitchen, trying to cook up a meal with the cupboards bare and Zanu
PF holding the key to the larder, they are faced with a herculean
task.
Zanu PF is not
a homogenous lot, but it is not always easy to see where the different
interests lie. Their overall target seems to have been to absorb
the MDC in the way they did ZAPU (Zimbabwe African People-s
Union) in 1988. Then they would use the MDC to attract support from
Western donors to rebuild the economy, tell SADC that everything
is now in order, and by holding the security apparatus and some
key ministries such as justice and information, ultimately retain
control. Then they could win an election either by rigging or violence
or a combination, as is their wont, and continue on their merry
path.
However, many
in Zanu PF must have recognised that the MDC is quite a different
proposition from ZAPU - with much more widespread popularity
and greater foreign recognition - and that simple absorption
would probably not work. Hence, there has been the last-ditch attempt
by the hardliners to be so unreasonable in negotiation and obstructive
and devious in implementation that the MDC would be frightened off
and withdraw.
The MDC, however,
declined to walk into that particular trap, forcing the hardliners
to continue with a strategy to sabotage the power-sharing and render
it a sterile mule. They have put several arrows to their bow: the
ongoing detention of the abductees and Roy Bennett despite the obvious
subversion of the law and the courts; renewed farm invasions; and
the unilateral appointments of the RBZ (Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe)
governor, the attorney general and all permanent secretaries in
blatant contravention of the power-sharing agreement and the constitutional
amendment. It thus appears to many that nothing has changed and
that Zanu PF has won yet another battle through shrewd tactics and
the support of South Africa.
There are signs
of weakness, however. Rumours abound that the military top-brass
are using the detainees as pawns or bargaining chips to wring an
amnesty for their crimes. Could this mean that they are afraid to
make use of the forces they command? Do they doubt their loyalty?
Or do they realise that without easy money they cannot retain commitment
of the numbers of apparatchiks required to hold the line in the
face of widespread unpopularity. They may not in fact be in as strong
a position as some MDC and civil society pessimists assume.
Among the forces
ranged against Zanu PF there are indeed many sceptics. They fear
a repetition of ZAPU-s emasculation after the 1987 Unity Accord.
They note that Mugabe does not change, is devious and manipulative
and a master tactician, and that he has no intention whatsoever
of sharing power and will never do so willingly.
They point to
the fact that those in control in the military will not give up
as they fear retribution or prosecution for crimes dating back to
the early 1980s. They believe that the many thousands of Zanu PF
cronies, war veterans and militia, as well as intelligence operatives
who support the hardliners, will be able to use manipulation, force
and intimidation to keep them in power.
They point to
the fact that the MDC has been able to accomplish little in the
weeks since its swearing-in and the longer they are unable to secure
the release of high-profile detainees, or make progress on the other
disputed issues, the more they will lose credibility and attract
criticism and abuse from former supporters.
They believe
the US$100 paid to civil servants for February salaries is not sustainable
and there is not enough funding to repeat this gesture even in March,
let alone increase the amount.
They say that
nothing has changed; the police continue to beat and arrest peaceful
demonstrators, the courts still follow executive and even military
orders rather than the law, the media is not free, the law is applied
selectively and Mugabe can still count on his supporters to fork
out cash for an ostentatious 85th birthday display of contempt for
the misery of the people.
And many democrats
have a deeper concern about the MDC. Not only will they accomplish
little, they will indeed be swallowed by Zanu PF, not so much by
its structures and policies but by its culture of corruption and
cronyism. Signs are already there, as the Mercedes Benzes roll out
for the boys and the girls. These could have been repudiated, as
could the obsequious deference to authority figures, in favour of
a puritan look for the bloated cabinet.
However, there
are also optimists. They are the ones who supported participation
in a government of national unity as the least unpalatable option.
They can point to the fact that the government has actually been
formed and has not yet collapsed. They believe that the combination
of the finance ministry and several important service industries
are enough for the MDC to show the people that they are concerned
and are prepared to commit themselves to work feverishly to begin
the formidable task of reconstruction. In spite of numerous disputed
issues, they have already begun and have partially reversed some
of the catastrophes of Zanu PF-s control, including exaggerated
increases in service charges and the ongoing teachers- strike.
And there are
now beginning to be signs of change. What a pleasure to see queues
of returning teachers outside the Ministry of Education office,
even though there are monumental problems to overcome before schools
operate effectively. Optimists believe that the hardliners won-t
be able to hold the country hostage forever, as they see a subtle
power shift beginning to show itself on the ground.
There are indications
- again primarily rumours - that a large percentage
of intelligence officers as well as lower ranking soldiers welcome
a change and are disillusioned with Zanu PF. Reports are coming
from some places of revenge attacks on Zanu PF cadres and sympathisers
responsible for brutality during the elections of 2008. Once again,
the police are not looking very hard for the perpetrators of some
of these attacks; the only difference from a year ago is that this
time it is Zanu PF victims they are failing to support. There is
even a report of Zanu PF councillors in some areas deserting their
party as a result of pressure from the electorate. At least three
Zanu PF thugs have been sentenced for brutal assaults carried out
during the election campaigns.
While these
may be very few cases, amongst others of continued loyalty of the
police to Zanu PF, in a situation like ours, rumour can sometimes
be very powerful. Obedient servants need to be very alert to changes
of the wind that represent shifts in power. Those who never were
devoted loyalists, and others who are simply opportunists, now see
that there are in fact new possibilities.
Many are carefully
calculating the advantages and disadvantages. If power really does
shift and they turn their faces too late, they may get caught behind
a closing door. As we witness the release of detainees one by one,
they are watching to see if this is a wayward gust or the sign of
a coming storm. They are taking note that many Zimbabweans are no
longer afraid of their former tormentors, openly demonstrating their
new-found defiance. And if enough judge that the new will outperform
the old, they will themselves create that shift.
The disheartening
part of this whole story is that once again the MDC are failing
to use the one weapon that could be a key factor in effecting that
shift, their support among the people. Not a single attempt have
they made to mobilise people to show that the old has gone, and
that the new is on the way. Once again it has been left to others
like students and WOZA (Women of Zimbabwe Arise)women and men to
test the waters, to push the police to take a position. Where is
the MDC on the ground? Where is the vision of democracy and popular
participation that could dispel the muttering that the power-sharing
is just a politicians- game, by and for politicians without
the people? Even the committed symbolism of hunger striking has
been left to the principled in South African civil society.
Nevertheless,
our only hope is with this strange aberration called a government
of national unity. For all its weaknesses, for all its conflicts,
the pushing and pulling, squabbling over issues important and unimportant,
this creature now occupying political space in Zimbabwe is probably
our only hope. If it fails, Zimbabwe will have failed and we would
likely disintegrate into a nation of warlords and bandits. If it
can hold together over the coming weeks and months, and make some
small progress until an externally supervised election can be held,
it will have done us a service.
Last week the
voice of Jestina Mukoko was heard on BBC, recently released on bail.
Others have emerged one by one and two by two from their prison
cells, the vicious attorney general was being shunned by his own
party members as he was sworn in to parliament, the Zanu PF minister
who disputed the allocation of telecommunications to an MDC minister
admitted that he was wrong but was 'sent-, and it has
been announced that the 'principals- have agreed on
a formula for reallocating permanent secretary posts. Will these
be the last concessions, merely gusts against the prevailing wind,
or do they signal a permanent shift? Will Tsvangirai-s injuries
and bereavement create a dangerous hiatus, which allows the promise
to dissipate?
We can-t
yet know, but each small step will be difficult and concessions
will be won through determination, perseverance and belief that
it can be done. Our focus has to be on the present, not the distant
or even nearer future. At this stage no one can afford not to believe,
including the international community whose assistance is essential.
Americans have shown us that it is not too audacious to hope. Belief
can create reality. The mule might still be sterile. But there is
a bizarre custom amongst some Zimbabwean peoples, which might provide
a more promising analogy: a rapist is sometimes forced to marry
his victim and while the marriage may be intensely unhappy, a healthy
child is frequently the result.
Miracles are
not common, but they do happen for people who believe. If this hybrid
government can pull through the horror, the anger, the distrust
and despair of the past week intact, perhaps it can happen for us.
Millions of Zimbabweans desperately need a miracle, and more and
more are beginning to hope.
* Mary Ndlovu
is a Zimbabwean human rights activist.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|