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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Spotlight on inclusive government: It's working - Index of articles
Zim election 2011: Ready, set, go?
Jack Pedzisai Zaba
June 24, 2010
The Global
Political Agreement (GPA) is gradually moving towards its second
anniversary with its chassis structurally still in shape but the
wheels have already lost alignment as they are pulling into different
directions. Admittedly the great citizens of this country have been
afforded some sigh of relief and an opportunity to recover economically
since the formation of the existing compromise government in Zimbabwe.
Indeed the embattled
people of Zimbabwe have taken a rest from the humiliating routine
of scavenging for even the most basic of commodities like bread,
sugar and salt as in the era prior 2009 since these commodities
are now readily available in the shops, with motorists enjoying
not only the free windscreen cleaning service of yesteryear from
service stations, but also the ability to buy fuel worth even a
dollar when you are broke.
However, from the day
this coalition government was born it has always been sickly and
hounded by its parent-s bickering and skirmishing over who
wields more power than the other.
The sixteen month old
inclusive government incrementally suffers from incoherence and
fighting especially between the two main actors President Mugabe
and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai. There remains a deep rooted
incongruence between the two and the parties they represent. Mugabe
refuses to share gubernatorial posts with his partners in government,
he still abuses the public media to his advantage and whilst he
might want economic recovery for this country he simply can-t
be moved an inch towards meaningful political reform. He forgets
from his several degrees that the latter facilitates the former.
Succinctly put where
the MDC has moved ten steps ahead ZANU PF has yet to complete their
second step towards political reform and sanitization of Zimbabwe-s
fouled political infrastructure. The marriage of convenience seems
to have been doomed from the start and as fate would tell, divorce
papers are already being signed by the protagonists to the marriage.
Is the uneasy marriage
of convenience called GPA sustainable any longer, or will it perpetuate
on resilience and endurance like any other marriages within our
midst? Are the pronunciations and insinuations coming from ZANU
PF and MDC hinting on a possible election in 2011 instructive enough?
Are the parties to the unity government themselves ready to have
an election so soon?
A few weeks ago, the
leader of the inconsequential and smaller faction of the MDC Professor
Arthur Mutambara told his party supporters to brace for an election
soon. Before this announcement Mutambara and his party were on record
of being fearful of an election at any given time. Theirs has been
an utopian dream that the GPA shall live perpetually for "it
is the best thing ever to happen to Zimbabwe." This group
of political charlatans have a strong detest for elections, admittedly
so because they appreciate their apparent lack of popularity within
the electorate, and in a democracy, if you have no huge base of
supporters who later translate into votes, you are out of power.
Mutambara`s MDC acknowledges
that their political life is only sustained by the GPA which unfortunately
continues to be an unstable, unpredictable and a failing marriage
of convenience. Now to think that this group of individuals would
wish for an election in Zimbabwe any time soon is to the least day
dreaming. Indeed nobody would wish to know or see the day his death
certificate will be written. It therefore becomes axiomatic that
DPM Mutambara appreciates and is actually at a closer view of the
ever widening abysmal rift between Prime Minister Tsvangirai and
President Mugabe. In as much as he knows that the antagonism between
the two is a generational difference he has no political clout to
handle them both. Therefore Mutambara`s admission and apparent pretensions
that his party might be ready for elections as well, is misleading
foolhardy.
The MDC led by Prime
Minister Tsvangirai has been justifiably making the loudest demands
for an election in 2011. They are playing the aggrieved part in
the marriage. Their bitterness and frustration understandably began
in 2008 when ZANU PF grabbed their morsel of bread at a time they
were ready to chew. The revolutionary party went into hiding with
someone-s food for five weeks before re-emerging pretending
to be good boy by offering half of the looted bread as a compromise
for unity.
The GPA was lucidly and
clearly prescriptive that the partners in the compromise government
should treat each other with dignified respect and each of them
honouring to following the letter and spirit of the agreement.
With the Tsvangirai led
MDC having had shown unparalleled statesmanship in agreeing to share
authority with ZANU PF, who lost the election, the latter betrayed
the former by refusing to implement most of what they agreed on.
So the MDC has not seen a civilised ZANU PF since the advent of
the GNU, instead there has been a sustained and systematic continuation
of the torture, ridicule, abuse , arrest and murder of the MDC leadership
and its members in general.
This has created a hopeless
situation for Tsvangirai to imagine that the GPA would manifest
into a stable governing authority. To him, as he always suspected,
ZANU PF is reluctant to reform into a modern civilized party, a
behaviour that militates against efforts towards political sanitization
and economic recovery. The MDC-T has belief that an election conducted
in fairness and freeness should usher in a legitimate and people
chosen governing authority. Their hope is that by 2011 Zimbabwe
would have undergone far reaching political reforms that are adequate
for the conducting of an acceptably free and fair election. Buoyed
by their 2008 victory, the MDC can confidently " . . . .urge
the immediate convening of a SADC summit to discuss the roadmap
to an election and guarantees to the legitimacy of that election",
as was declared by Prime Minister Tsvangirai some weeks ago.
More interestingly, ZANU
PF a party which since 1980 has been associated with the bloody
and anarchic elections that characterized Zimbabwe-s post
colonial era, has also declared in numerous occasions that they
are readying for an election in 2011. Robert Mugabe clarified even
further that these elections will certainly go ahead with or without
the constitutional reform process being complete. I became a bit
scared and worried at hearing this?
Since the emergence of
the MDC, ZANU PF has been losing elections routinely, although they
remained in power. They are erudite enough to know that the people
of Zimbabwe have lost confidence in their governing style.
Elections have been conducted
at adequately regular intervals in Zimbabwe since 1980 with Mugabe
controversially retaining power during that period. Now he still
wants to be in power but circumstances are greatly changing. The
GPA provided a great opportunity for political reform in Zimbabwe.
Whilst this should be good news to most Zimbabweans, the doomed
revolutionary party has become more scared and paranoid. Above all
ZANU PF seems to be determined to remain a barbaric and uncouth
political party which thrives on anarchy-Machiavelli style. Now,
how can ZANU PF wish for elections which they have even lesser chances
of winning?
Of course it is greatly
misleading to take their wish for an election as an expression of
their willingness to reform and show the world that they are now
a modernized political formation. Indeed calls for an early election
by ZANU PF could be emanating from the hard core vampires within
the party, who for long had been refusing to embrace the GPA as
a necessary process to cleanse Zimbabwe-s political fabric.
People like George Charamba (Nathaniel Manheru) still struggle to
come to terms with the fact that the MDC, he so much loathes, has
representatives whose offices, as government officials are also
located at Munhumutapa building. He is still in a denial mode. He
foolishly wishes for the day the MDC shall be crushed, either in
an election or physically. Charamba is the epitome of such denialists
within ZANU PF, and this is the group of barbaric politicians who
masterminded the maiming, killing, arson and rape of many people
leading to a sham and uninteresting drama that happened on June
27 2008. And they called it an election, without even an iota of
shame.
So this is the same group
with the same political style calling for an election in 2011. They
still have a score to settle against Tsvangirai. However such people
are well aware that if Zimbabwe is left to conduct a free and fair
election, with no violence, no manipulation of the results and equal
access to the media, then it will be the end of ZANU PF. Hence they
are so determined to scuttle any processes that would enhance the
freeness and fairness of elections in Zimbabwe. This tells why Charamba
didn-t celebrate the coming in of new media players, he stills
wishes to stop the coming in of a new private broadcasters and the
general exorcism of the fouled political infrastructure in Zimbabwe.
Yes ZANU PF might therefore
be calling for an election to satisfy their egos that this country
shall remain in the sole grip of their party. They have a misguided
feeling that in the next election their party will be victorious.
Interestingly they have no modern triumphant strategy except to
repeat ZvaJune (the June 2008 madness).
Such is a call for Zimbabweans
to be on alert whenever ZANU PF intimates that they are preparing
for an election. This ongoing constitutional reform process provides
a platform for everyone to contribute towards the setting up of
legal and institutional governance structures that are insulated
from the manipulation by individuals in power. This is a rare generational
priviledge to shape the democratic destination of this great nation.
Jack Pedzisai
Zaba is a political scientist and an elections specialist based
in Harare. He can be contacted on zabajack09@gmail.com
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