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Inclusive government - Index of articles
MDC T disengagement is ominous yet inevitable and practical
Isaya
Sithole
October 21, 2009
It must have
come as a shock to many Zimbabweans when the MDC T leader, Mr M.R
Tsvangirai, announced his party-s disengagement from the inclusive
government citing unresolved and outstanding issues in the Global
Political Agreement. This is a very serious, well-considered
and well-timed move by the MDC T, but one which has ominous implications
if it is not handled with care by the other parties to the GPA.
The practical and operational dynamics of the inclusive government
as hitherto constituted, against a background of massive violence
against MDC T supporters and activists towards the June 27 2008
Presidential election run-off of the March 29 inconclusive elections
in which Tsvangirai led, made it not only inevitable, but practical,
though ominous, for the MDC T to disengage.
The Global Political
Agreement has its genesis in the failure of electoral politics in
Zimbabwe to resolve the socio-politico-economic challenges the country
is facing. It came from the crucible of negotiations and compromise,
and is therefore underpinned by different intentions and interpretations.
Some see it as an indispensable "insurance policy" and
"guarantee", while others regard it as a forced compromise
that in the medium to long term could have a curtailing and inhibiting
impact on the popular will. What cannot be taken away from the GPA
and the inclusive-cum-exclusive government though, is that it has
managed to bring back semblances of peace and instability and accompanying
hope and confidence in the country.
Political violence had
decreased, macro-economic fundamentals were stabilizing, regional
and international integration was promising, re-engagement with
the international community was gradually bearing fruit, with grants,
lines of credit and investors trickling into the country, and the
tourism sector exhibiting massive potential for growth, not to mention
that economic planning and investment promotion was fairly possible
and predictable. It is against this background that the MDC T disengagement
from the inclusive government is ominous, with the danger that much
of the little progress that has been made so far in the rationalization
of not only our macro-economic and macro-social fundamentals, but
also, and equally importantly, our macro-political fundamentals,
may actually be undone.
Agriculture, tourism,
mining, industry, commerce and international trade have already
been thrown into disarray. Some public and private enterprises that
had clinched some deals or are still negotiating deals with international
investors may have to live with the disruptive consequences of supposedly
honorable men and women dishonoring themselves by failing to implement
what they agreed on. What a way to scare away badly needed, yet
skeptical, international investors. Smart foolishness! All those
expensive investment conferences and indabas have now come to nought.
Whatever its defectiveness,
the negotiators of the GPA and the facilitator must be lauded for
their strenuous, and sometimes thankless, efforts in the long and
winding negotiations that culminated in the GPA. Posterity will
give them their proper place in history. The GPA managed to capture
the essence of a compromise, namely that there were no winners and
no losers_ the middle course won the argument. It was not easy to
strike a negotiated settlement after almost a decade of belligerence
in which some people grew more powerful than the institutions which
bestowed the power on them, thinking had been replaced by belligerent
justification and rational process had given way to obstinate rationalization.
It was not easy for Tsvangirai
to humble himself and accept a diminished Prime Ministerial role
in a coalition government with skewed power relations, when the
results of the March 29 2008 inconclusive Presidential elections
resoundingly and inescapably led to the conclusion that a majority
of Zimbabweans want him at the helm of state affairs in Zimbabwe,
notwithstanding persistent efforts by some retrogressive reactionaries
to continue to ridicule and undermine him and what he symbolizes.
It was not easy either for President Mugabe to convince anti-reform
conservatives in his party that ZANU PF needs to make a paradigm
shift from a commandist to consensual polity, characterized by mutual
respect and understanding, even if the person concerned is Morgan
Richard Tsvangirai and the party concerned is MDC T. And even if
the organizations concerned are the National Constitutional Assembly,
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, Zimbabwe National Students Union
and/or Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition.
It is continuing to be
difficult and complex for the President (who must now play a fatherly
and elder statesman-s role) and reformers in ZANU PF to convince
their retrogressive conservative counterparts that voting for MDC
T in a free and fair election is not voting wrongly (kukanganisa
kuvhota) and that it does not warrant abusing state resources and
institutions to institute a reign of terror against innocent citizens
of Zimbabwe, under the guise of protecting and safeguarding national
security, sovereignty and the sacrosanct nationalist and Pan-Africanist
ideals of the liberation struggle.
It is clear to anyone
who cares to look below the veneer that there is a self-serving
and powerful clique in ZANU PF that initiated, planned and executed
the reign of terror after March 29 2008, and is now holding the
President hostage by coercing him to abuse his honorable position
in government to politically destroy Honorable Prime Minister Tsvangirai
and the MDC T, by refusing to resolve outstanding issues in the
GPA, knowing very well that this will disappoint, disillusion and
frustrate MDC members and supporters who survived the terror that
they inhumanly unleashed against them. Prime Minister Tsvangirai
and the entire MDC T leadership have now liberated and redeemed
themselves and their consciences by refusing to be destroyed politically,
disengaging from the inclusive government and going back to the
people.
It was indeed not easy
also for Professor Arthur Mutambara, Professor Welshman Ncube (
who has been in the thick of the negotiations since 2002) and MDC
M to act as a solvent to the belligerence of the two major parties
to the GPA, when it became clear during the long and winding negotiations
that the crisis in Zimbabwe would not and could not be resolved
by the mighty, but by the meek; and that it would be done by a very
human series of moral and ethical responses rather than by positivist
legal or grand government or majority gesture. It was not easy because
MDC M-s conciliatory role, and DPM Mutambara-s ultra-pro-ZANU
PF positions in the first four months of the consummation of the
inclusive government, generated internal contradictions that threatened
to destroy the party as a separate entity. Now the party has another
challenge and it remains to be seen whether they will be up to it.
As far as the inclusive
government is concerned, it is the long, tortuous and grinding conflict
of the past decade and the long, winding and tiresome negotiations
culminating in the GPA that should instruct, inform, inspire and
determine our present and future. It is against this background
that the MDC T-s disengagement is ominous. But what is even
more ominous are attempts by this self-serving and insecure elite
in ZANU PF to undermine the GPA as "a mere piece of paper"
whose relevance expired with the enactment of Constitutional Amendment
No. 19 and the consummation of the inclusive government on February
13 2009. This is clear political mischief and l hope patriotic and
peace-loving Zimbabweans can see through it. I hope His Excellency,
the President, can see through it too.
It is now a public secret
that after the signing of the GPA, this political terroristic kleptocratic
elite took advantage of the psychologically disorienting trauma
they had caused in the country to reign in on the President to make
senior appointments in government in contravention of the letter
and spirit of the GPA, knowing very well that the President would
people he had a soft spot for. Now they have put the President in
a dilemma by putting him in a catch-22 situation in which he must
now supposedly choose between the people he had appointed and those
preferred by the other parties to the GPA.
This group surreptitiously
and clandestinely go to these appointed people in the dark and to
other ZANU PF members and supporters behind the President-s
back to influence them that with all the good things that they did
for him he now wants to dump them in favor of people from the two
MDC formations, thereby creating tension and instability in the
President-s political constituency. They then go back to the
President to blackmail him that resolving outstanding issues in
the GPA will destabilize ZANU PF, lead to the President-s
downfall and facilitate regime change and an imperialist onslaught,
knowing very well that the President does not like both imperialists
and regime change, as if constitutional regime change is a crime
and as if there is any other regime apart from a coalition of the
three parties to the GPA.
This factional and divisive
ZANU PF elite, which is desperate to succeed President Mugabe ahead
of the other faction which is more humane, conciliatory and democratic,
thrives on constructing conspiracy theories around the President,
make him feel insecure, and then paradoxically pose as the only
people capable of protecting the President, in a political sense,
even though the President-s tenure for entire duration of
the inclusive government is guaranteed in the GPA, which the same
group is mischievously trying to undermine to save their selfish
purpose of making the President feel insecure, play on his fears
and then manipulate and hold him to ransom, together with the entire
Zimbabwean population desperate for an improvement in their livelihoods.
People want food and jobs, not political bickering.
It is unfortunate that
this desperate clique in ZANU PF has created a situation that led
to the personalization of outstanding issues in the GPA, a national
agreement involving the three major political parties in Zimbabwe.
Reserve Bank governor, Dr Gideon Gono and Attorney General Johannes
Tomana have now unfortunately and regrettably become embodiments
of the outstanding issues in the GPA and, to be honest, l personally
feel for them and their families in respect of the embarrassment,
humiliation and degradation they now suffer but since they are public
personalities, they must be able to stand and endure the heat in
the political kitchen.
While Tomana has his
own problems of zealotry, redeemable characters like Dr Gono and
others are complicating their situation by laying themselves open
to self-serving political manipulation by a retrogressive and reactionary
clique in ZANU PF. They make it seem as if the only posts that Gono
and Tomana can occupy within and outside the government of Zimbabwe
are those Reserve Bank Governor and Attorney-General respectively.
And yet we cry about a brain drain. This is not patriotism but senseless
and stupid chauvinism which all patriotic Zimbabweans must challenge
unequivocally, irrespective of their political affiliation.
I know there are men
and women of honor in ZANU PF and l appeal to them to summon their
moral courage and stand up to be counted in safeguarding the sanctity
of the GPA_ a reflection of the balance of political forces in Zimbabwe
as at September 15, 2008. This is the basis and foundation of political
engagement in the inclusive government and must be honored and given
its proper place by all the signatories to it. Any attempt from
any quarter to reverse the political equilibrium in Zimbabwe as
captured in the GPA must and will be resisted.
Deputy Prime Minister
Mutambara has already started engaging the other principals. It
is good to note that he now understands his role. The negotiators
must also start re-engaging. But it would appear that this is now
a matter that should now fall squarely and directly in the hands
of the SADC troika with the urgency that it deserves. The facilitator,
Mr Thabo Mbeki, also still has a role to play. Any delay in this
regard will further impoverish the Zimbabwean people, with catastrophic
and cataclysmic consequences. Those who are influencing the President
must see for themselves that they have now become the biggest threat
to national peace and security. It does not help matters to try
to reduce the MDC T pull-out to a protest against the trial of Roy
Benett when there are some fundamental legal, structural, institutional,
administrative and operational issues that go to the heart of the
GPA.S
But l am hopeful though,
that very soon the outstanding issues in the GPA will be resolved
and that the MDC T will re-engage. This largely depends on the manner
in which the other two parties to the GPA will handle the MDC T-s
potentially explosive disengagement from the inclusive government,
both at the perception and practical levels.
Naturally, transition
politics naturally manifest themselves in uncertainty, increasing
violence (verbal, physical and psychological), suspicion, occasional
despair and the consolidation of power bases. The danger of losing
political power and leverage is ever present in a transitional coalition
arrangement such as we have and constituency pressures consistently
haunt the principals, either in the form of high expectations or
that they have sold out. Because of this, policy positions and pronouncements
always see-saw and oscillate between the radical faction and the
realist faction. This is the theoretical rhythm of all transitional
processes everywhere throughout the world; what differs is the tempo.
What is required is what is called a "process alliance"
amongst the leadership and, noticeably, all the three principals
seem to understand this key concept. The challenge is to keep the
inclusive government intact while making win-win compromises along
the way.
However, in all this
, a great deal of intellectual and political dexterity is required
for, notwithstanding the process alliance, it is almost an inevitability
that arguments will be heated at times, that participants will still
flex political muscles on occasion, and that sometimes the drama
can be felt and the atmosphere proverbially cut with a knife. Much
depends on the craftsmanship of the principals in managing their
constituencies; to vibrate with the pulse of their members and supporters,
and yet without compromising on their commitments to the other principals
and to the GPA.
So, by disengaging from
the inclusive government, apart from merely pressing for the fulfillment
of outstanding issues in the GPA, the MDC T is also consolidating
its power base. When they finally re-engage after the resolution
of the sticking issues, they will be more secure, confident and
stronger. Even if the outstanding issues are resolved, it is important
to note that the inclusive government, for its entire lifespan,
will always work within the rather uncomfortable situation of opposition-in-partnership.
This is a fundamental dynamic element of any coalition government
anywhere in the world.
* Isaya
Muriwo Sithole is a lawyer practicing in Harare, as well as an independent
political, strategic & development consultant. Feedback: isithole@yahoo.com
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