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"The MDC disengagement":
The time to begin
Thabani
Nyoni
November 11, 2009
The current polarized
political debate in Zimbabwe over the controversial decision by
the MDC-T to 'disengage- from some executive functions
of the power sharing government no doubt needs careful attention.
Some analysts have gone to the extent of questioning MDC-T-s
wisdom in joining the inclusive government in the first place, a
certain section has queried the rationale behind partial disengagement,
even claiming that the MDC is now gainfully part of the lucrative
business of politics. This may be an indicator of the Great Expectations
and Hope people have invested on this party. It may also be a genuine
reminder to the MDC-T that it is walking a tight rope and every
step must be made with utmost care. At the same time, one can sense
growing culture of cynical inaction or self-righteous action that
lacks objectivity and may distract people from appreciating the
value of this moment.
Perhaps a way to begin
is to make sense of the how the MDC-T signed the deal to form an
inclusive government with ZANU PF in the first place. One cannot
do so without understanding the social and political context of
that time: the days leading to the signing of the deal and even
after the signing itself were hell on earth for most Zimbabweans.
Apart from the cholera epidemic, there was drought, no economic
production worth talking about, and if anything was in abundance,
it was the ever-increasing supply of the valueless Zimbabwean dollar
notes which tumbled a million times with every daily printing. Against
this background, the bold and justified calls from the Zimbabwean
civic movement for a broad-based, open, and inclusive negotiation
process for transition had to be unfortunately rendered less urgent.
Understandably, the supplications to the MDC-T to set aside 'their
selfish political interest- and consider the misery of the
suffering Zimbabweans took priority. Eventually, the bold demands
for responsibility with authority in the inclusive government by
the MDC-T were overshadowed by the people-s calls for pity.
The Prime Minister,
Morgan Tsvangirai admitted that, 'the agreement we sign today
is a product of painful compromise. It does not provide an instant
cure for the ills that pervade our society and our country. The
road ahead is long and will not be easy. Indeed, the partners in
this new, inclusive government cannot alone provide the solutions
to the problems facing the country. All we can do, and we will do,
is to work together to establish the environment where every Zimbabwean
has the opportunity to contribute to solving the problems we face.-
This made one very cynical about this approach as a sustainable
political arrangement. However, one chose to appreciate MDC-s
courageous decision of choosing to tread in an unfamiliar territory,
one that the ZANU PF knows quite well, and where chances of success
were not guaranteed. These words from the prime minister were a
strong call to action that sought to create and communicate a new
meaning and consciousness to the attitudes and actions of every
Zimbabwean of whatever political persuasion. One year on, some people
have totally forgotten that this deal was signed because of the
belief that it represents 'the best opportunity for us to
build a peaceful, prosperous, democratic Zimbabwe- and call
for its instant abandonment.
It is undeniable
that the inclusive government has failed deliver on its mandate
and the fact that ZANU PF is not willing to see democratic reforms
taking shape in this country is only a part of the full story. The
other unspoken and uncomfortable truth is that one individual or
organization can achieve a successful but not meaningful democratization
and transformation agenda. In that regard, the MDC is not the alpha
and omega of the process of democratic transition. While it certainly
deserves to be criticized for those actions that stand against the
values and aspirations of the people, this must however be done
in pursuance of our enlarged and permanent interests of Zimbabweans.
Of note is the fact that those who seek to dismantle the stranglehold
of dictatorship have chosen to focus on one individual or organization
as a way of giving a face to our problem and that face is Mugabe
and the institution, ZANU PF. In the same way, they have also given
one individual, and organization as the sole face of the struggle
- Tsvangirai and the MDC-T, which of course restricts our options
and possibilities. Any meaningful political inclusion and social
transformation must have many faces, multiple stakeholders and intentional
interventions. Zimbabwe still stands on the democracy deficit partly
because of some people have decided to use their talents to applaud
or criticize those who do or do not do what they expect. Some even
attribute their own inaction to ZANU PF 's brutality and one
is sure ZANU PF loves every moment of it!
The focus on
ZANU PF or MDC clouds one-s proper appreciation of the foundational
attitudes, institutions, and systems that commissioned and continue
to sustain the dictatorship. The question is, are concerned citizens
building sufficient social capital with a supportive collective
consciousness to leverage good decisions or salvage bad decisions
made by the MDC-T to engage or disengage? It is that easy to be
critical and cynical without taking responsibility at all? The best
service for Zimbabwe may not only be about focusing on making sense
of who is wrong or right. People need to invade the public and political
forums, policy arenas and courts (including that of public opinion)
with the objective of establishing new norms and principles upon
which we legitimize or de-legitimize certain individuals and organizations,
as representatives of the popular will. Community organizing must
begin to recreate the yesteryear victims of the status quo to be
the champions of our emancipation. The HIV positive men and women,
ordinary people from the same communities emerged as leaders to
organize diverse individuals to fight against the pandemic. Helping
people to discover their power is the solution. The attitude and
belief that it is impossible to remove Mugabe and that he will have
to die so that we can move on must be abandoned in the same way
that the belief that HIV positive men and women discarded the belief
that being HIV positive means death. Caution must be taken against
waiting for Mugabe-s death because this is an admission that
the future is not a product of the people-s toils. When one
resigns to fate, they automatically resign their life and the lives
of their children-s children to any outcome, even a tragic
one. The same regrettable deeds that were visited on the current
generation befall the next generations, rendering the current generation
a generation of cowards worse than the current dictators. Notice
how a despotic colonial regime was easily replaced by one after
its kind in the form of ZANU PF. At that moment, the nation, deeply
engulfed in the independence euphoria, failed to strategically locate
and define rights and responsibilities of a citizen in a new Zimbabwe.
While blaming ZANU PF for illegally holding on to power and trampling
upon the very sacred act of democracy, and while lambasting the
MDC for holding on to the 'unworkable- power sharing
deal and for 'behaving like an estranged wife', or for signing the
deal in the first place, people must ask themselves if they have
done enough or their best to stop or perpetuate the current state
of affairs. Are there any efforts to create a reality that forces
ZANU PF or even any other party (MDC included) to make a choice
of either sharing power or losing it? In what ways are citizens
actively participating and co-creating a new dispensation where
ZANU PF, MDC-T or any other political party must be made to choose
a shared power world or no world at all?
The painful existence
in times life and times of Zimbabweans under Robert Mugabe and ZANU
PF-s reign of terror should have taught people to 'never
again- allow those who access executive authority and legislative
power to do so without an understanding of how to use it to empower
the citizens? Monitoring how leaders and political leadership conduct
their own internal politics to build in their organizations institutions
of democracy and cooperation, not violence could be a useful assessment.
Hardworking and patriotic Zimbabweans must reflect on the fact that
part of their suffering results from having spent the greater part
of their 'independent years- as excellent tax-payers
to the very reckless tax-users, ZANU PF government. It is no a wonder
that the further the country moved away from our terrible colonial
past, the worse the people-s material condition became. The
time has come for more leaders to emerge from within communities,
leaders that will communicate the message of the future not the
past. By the way, the people are very clear about where they come
from and no one wants to go back there. So rather than keeping people
in the fear of the past that may catch up with them, leaders who
are dealers in hope must emerge to make people focus on creating
that future they desire.
One finds the
debate on whether the policy of disengagement by the MDC is good
or bad a bit off the mark. The debate should be about how to use
this development to reorganize and regroup the fragmented but progressive
civic movement. How to organize the community to action and re-ignite
the political consciousness in the kombis, buses, streets, homes,
churches, schools and beer halls to create an adequate vernacular
understanding of democracy from every citizen. It must aim to connect
the meaning of democracy to the people-s basic toils and needs,
to re-awakening the communities to defy subtle the political campaign
to reduce them to a 'Zombie nation-. This is the task
of every progressive Zimbabwean and citizen of the world, especially
those of who claim to be enlightened. They must facilitate conversations
that create an understanding that in building and sustaining democracy,
voting alone is not sufficient, especially in our beloved Zimbabwe,
where voting has been defiled to a point that it is no longer a
sacred act of democracy. True democracy should be developed along
the values of an inclusion that comes through effective participation
and an enlightened understanding of both the processes people are
working on and the aspirations they espouse. When citizens begin
to do that, then they will deal with the challenge of having a weak
but authoritarian regime claiming popularity and legitimacy from
the rural constituencies and the pan-African community using misinformation,
lies and propaganda. In that light, MDC-s disengagement must
be seen as a signal that the time has come to begin moving towards
a future Zimbabweans deserve!
*Thabani
Nyoni writes from the University of Minnesota in USA where he is
doing an International Fellowship Program in Leadership, Public
Policy and Program Evaluation. Until his departure for the studies,
he was working as a community organizer for social and political
change in Zimbabwe.
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