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to the future for Zimbabwe
Piers Pigou, Mail
& Guardian (SA)
April 08, 2011
Zanu PF-s
announcement at its December 2010 congress that only an election
could chart a way forward for Zimbabwe signaled the beginning of
the end for the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) and the fractious coexistence of its
inclusive government, now two years old.
Since then, there has
been a significant increase in reported levels of violence, repressive
state action, malicious prosecution of leaders of the Tsvangirai
faction of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and civic actors,
as well as increased levels of pro-Zanu-PF and anti-MDC state media
propaganda.
Two weeks ago, the leaders
of the MDC, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, briefed South African
Development Community facilitator Jacob Zuma on the deteriorating
conditions, pleading for protection and warning that the situation
was spiraling out of control and that the MDC may be forced to pull
out of the government.
South Africa and the
region have heard such pleas before, and some may remain suspicious
that the MDC and its leader are crying wolf. The "body count"
may be incomparable to other cries on the continent, but there is
no escaping the fact that the house of cards Thabo Mbeki was instrumental
in constructing in Zimbabwe is on the verge of collapse. Even if
it does survive, it seems incapable of delivering a sustainable
solution in its current configuration.
The GPA was
intended to provide a platform for implementing reform that would
lay the basis for the restoration of a legitimate democratic process
in Zimbabwe. Seen by some as betrayal of the popular vote an a reward
for Zanu-PF-s violent campaign avert a transfer of power to
the MDC, the agreement has been described as "the only game
in town" in the absence of any feasible alternative. It is
a game, however, in which the odds have been heavily stacked in
favour of Zanu-PF. Indeed, from its inception, there was an obvious
distortion in the balance of power in favour of Zanu-PF, especially
because the party would retain virtually exclusive control over
the security and criminal justice establishment, and by extension
the infrastructure of repression.
This has enabled Zanu-PF
to manipulate and resist the reform matrix set out in the accord,
leaving large segments of the GPA in a permanent (and unresolved)
state of negotiation. Even agreements made between the negotiating
teams and subsequently endorsed by political principals have, without
explanation, not been implemented. The GPA-s internal monitoring
and review mechanisms, designed to determine what is working and
what is not and how to fix it, are essentially defunct. Violations
are not sanctioned and those responsible for them have not been
held accountable.
Zimbabweans are consistently
told that they have the framework for resolving their difference
and that failure to do so is primarily their responsibility. Of
course, this is true, but it is a discourse that avoids an honest
reflection on the import of the inclusive government-s power
disparities and one that hides behind unsustainable notions of equitable
responsibility for non-implementation. It is designed essentially
to avoid having to hold Zanu-PF accountable and expose how the SADC
appears trapped in no-man-s-land between its increasingly
contradictory roles of facilitator and GPA guarantor.
The most immediate and
pressing challenge is to deal with violence and impunity, the partisan
nature of security and policing concerns, and the associated breakdown
in law and order. Most Zimbabweans have been affected directly or
indirectly by political violence since independence and this situation
has degenerated significantly in the past decade. There is a wide
spread of lack of trust and confidence in state structures, which
underscores the importance of a sustainable reform agenda that invests
in confidence-building measures in state institutions, especially
those responsible for preventing and remedying violence.
Lloyd Sachikonye-s
incisive review of political
violence over the past 50 years in Zimbabwe, When a State Turns
on Its Citizens (Jacana), has recently been published. It provides
an essential overview of why and how violence has become an ingrained
part of Zimbabwe-s political culture and what the consequences
are. It sets out Zanu-PF-s primary responsibilities in this
regard, and explains why we should all be concerned about the weakness
of the current reform process and the dangers associated with not
reforming the security sector, not breaking the cycle of violence
and accompanying systems of impunity. It has profound implications
for human security in Southern Africa beyond the borders of Zimbabwe.
Further elections
are inevitable, sooner or later, but they do not provide any possibility
of solving Zimbabwe-s problems unless they are rooted in tangible
reform process that is put in action. The correlation between elections
and violence in Zimbabwe is obvious and has contributed to significant
numbers disengaging from democratic participation. Just more than
2.5 million Zimbabweans, less than 43% of registered voters (from
a highly contested voters roll) voted in the 2008
elections - fewer than the numbers who voted in 1980.
The violent
2008 election campaign demonstrated how Zanu-PF could successfully
coerce more than a million additional voters to the voting booths.
Whether elections are held in 2011 or 2012, the question is not
whether there will be intimidation or violence, but rather how significant
will it be.
In this context,
it remains to be seen whether the SADC will prioritise robust engagement
with issues of political violence. Its track record makes it seem
unlikely that it can or will exert more pressure on the recalcitrant
elements swimming against the tide of democratic reform and by extension,
holding prospects for a sustainable solution in Zimbabwe to ransom.
As Sydney Mufamadi,
one of the Mbeki-s facilitation team, pointed out at a civic
briefing in Harare in 2009, "If one party decides to place
itself beyond persuasion, there is very little we can do."
Can do, one might ask, or will do? The South Africans have made
it clear they wont publicly censure those they seek to influence.
It-s a fine line to tread, especially when constructive engagement
appears perilously akin to appeasement.
*Piers Pigou
is an independent consultant
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