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Foreign aid dilemmas under Zimbabwe's inclusive government
Norma Kriger, Solidarity Peace Trust
August 12, 2011
http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/1092/foreign-aid-dilemmas/
Western donors
understandably tread warily in Zimbabwe where ZANU PF remains the
overwhelmingly dominant governing party in a formal coalition government.
The "Inclusive
Government" (IG) was formed in February 2009, following
the signing of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) in September 2008 by ZANU PF, Tsvangirai-s
MDC (MDC-T) and a smaller MDC formation. Western governments, initially
opposed to the formation of a coalition government, continue to
enforce travel bans and asset freezes against ZANU PF individuals
and ZANU PF-affiliated entities. ZANU PF has persisted with its
strident animosity to Western governments and donors, and has made
these sanctions policies a major reason for stalling on the implementation
of the GPA. While ZANU PF blames the sanctions for retarding economic
recovery, Western bilateral donors rightly point to their substantial
humanitarian aid - nearly US$651 million or 15-20% of GDP
in 2009. This aid also happens to boost the image of the MDC parties,
which were allocated Ministerial control of services, including
health and education, while ZANU PF ensured it retained the security
and foreign affairs Ministries, among others.
The role of Western foreign
aid in this highly polarized internal politics is surely one reason
why analysts have not focused much on its actual political impact.
Instead, the politics of the political parties- discourse
or rhetoric has received much more attention, with particular focus
on how ZANU PF depicts the West as undermining national sovereignty
and seeking regime change. Another reason for the relative dearth
of analysis about the political effects of foreign aid would seem
to be some acquiescence that Western donor aid has generally benefited
the opposition forces, chiefly MDC-T and civil society organizations,
as intended.
Using a few cases drawn
mainly from recently published reports whose main concerns were
not about foreign aid, I highlight some dilemmas of foreign aid
in Zimbabwe today. These cases suggest that, as in many other countries
(Gourevitch, 2010), foreign aid has also had unintended and/or perverse
political consequences in Zimbabwe. Its perverse impacts appear
to include the strengthening of ZANU PF-s power and patronage
resources and arguably a weakening of opposition forces or the shaping
of an opposition ill-suited to transforming authoritarian rule.
International
NGOs- aid hijacked by ZANU PF
Recently, while
reading The
Anatomy of Terror (2011, anonymous, to protect researchers and
informants) - a fascinating document that examined ZANU PF militia
bases- organization, resources, and personnel through detailed
studies of 15 selected constituencies - I learned that some high
profile international NGOs had their aid partially or fully hijacked
by ZANU PF since the signing of the GPA. In some constituencies,
the study noted, the operations of the international NGOs (INGOs)
were "judged to be entirely ZANU PF run", while in others
aid distribution was compromised. The list of INGOs included Environment
Africa, Mercy Corps, GOAL, Catholic
Relief Services, Oxfam GB, and World
Vision. The report also identifies local NGOs- projects
which have been compromised by ZANU PF intervention in aid distribution.
Since most local NGOs survive primarily on foreign donor funds,
such aid diversion is also relevant for this discussion.
Based on the report,
INGOs which operate in ZANU PF-controlled districts and use local
councilors and traditional authorities to distribute aid are prime
candidates to have their aid hijacked by ZANU PF. In ZANU PF-controlled
districts, these institutions are run by ZANU PF loyalists. But
aid channeled through MDC councilors, as in particular wards in
Zaka West (Masvingo Province), was also apparently captured by pro-ZANU
PF traditional authorities. In at least two other cases, individual
strongmen were able to redirect aid from its intended beneficiaries
to ZANU PF loyalists. One example comes from Buhera South (Manicaland
Province) and involves Joseph Chinotimba, a losing House of Assembly
candidate in 2008 and a notorious "war veteran". The
report, like many others, describes him as having been directly
involved in multiple rapes and two murder cases and also as a leader
in urban company and farm invasions after 2000. He reportedly set
up a committee chaired by a ZANU PF chief to control the entry of
NGOs into the constituency. According to the report, Chinotimba
acts as if Mercy Corps- borehole drilling project belongs
to him: he distributes the organization-s equipment to beneficiaries,
claiming the funds and clean water assistance come directly from
him.
If The Anatomy of Terror
is accurate, what should be the response of the organizations whose
aid has been diverted? Article 16.4(b) of the GPA forbids NGOs to
provide humanitarian assistance that discriminates on the basis
of political affiliation. Should affected NGOs invoke the GPA prohibition
against the partisan distribution of humanitarian assistance whenever
and wherever it is violated? Should they threaten to suspend all
their other projects in the country if aid diversion occurs in select
areas? Should they at least publicize who is diverting aid and where
it is being diverted? If they maintain a silence about non-transparent
aid distribution, how do we even know how widespread aid diversion
is? How should they balance their organizational interests in maintaining
their projects, the jobs they provide for locals and international
staff, and the benefits they provide to locals in some areas against
the direct role their aid has had in bolstering the local power
and patronage of ZANU PF henchmen?
Donor-funded
constitutional outreach program creates opportunity for ZANU PF
to rebuild rural influence
The writing of a new
constitution, a referendum on the draft constitution, and then an
election are key components of the GPA. The constitutional outreach
program, an important step in the constitution-making process, was
designed to solicit the preferences of the population. The model
for the constitution-making process agreed to by the three principals
in the government was that Members of Parliament (Senators and House
of Assembly representatives) would head each outreach team. Between
June and November 2010, the outreach program made Parliament inactive
as MPs earned handsome per diems from foreign donors, over and above
their MP salaries and allowances.
In January 2010,
SWRadio Africa published a list of perpetrators of political violence
associated with the 2008 presidential election run-off who would
be involved in the constitutional outreach program. Of the 44 named
perpetrators along with details of the ways in which they were involved
in electoral violence, many were ZANU PF Senators or MPs or ZANU
PF candidates who lost in the 2008 elections. Objections were raised
about UNDP, a major funder, paying per diems to known perpetrators
on the teams, the issue being that it fostered impunity and lack
of accountability. But at least according to ActionAid Denmark,
the political impact of multilateral and bilateral foreign donor
support for the constitutional outreach program was significant
for reasons beyond funding individual human rights violators.
ActionAid-s
report, A
Gathering Storm (November 2010), claims that ZANU PF used the
outreach process both to successfully campaign for its positions
on the new constitution in rural areas and also to rebuild its party-s
rural influence, especially in Mashonaland East, West and Central
Provinces and Manicaland. Because ZANU PF-s campaign for its
preferred constitutional provisions often used violence and intimidation,
the party also shrank the political space available for other political
parties and positions at outreach meetings. ActionAid noted that
unlike ZANU PF, "neither MDC nor civil society have launched
any attempt to seriously influence, let alone dominate, the process."
In a footnote, ActionAid commented that ZANU PF-s successful
strategies were heavily dependent on donor funds and listed not
only the UNDP but also Australia, Denmark, the EU, France, Holland,
the UK, and the USA, saying: "It is ironical that Zanu-PF
in this way seem to have re-conquered lost ground utilizing a process
almost entirely funded by its declared Western arch-enemies."
If an unintended
consequence of the donor-funded constitutional outreach process
was indeed to facilitate ZANU PF-s re-building of its rural
influence, donor support for democracy-building backfired. Should
donors treat all governing parties in an even-handed manner in their
democracy promotion programs, even when it means supporting a party
that has shown no signs of abandoning its authoritarian agenda and
strategic use of political violence and intimidation against its
opponents? Bilateral donor funding of the outreach program meant
at least indirect support for many ZANU PF MPs and other ZANU PF
leaders who are on Western sanctions- lists because of their
involvement in human rights abuses - and, according to the
January 2010 list published by SWRadio Africa, still other ZANU
PF leaders who were central organizers of local level violence
in 2008 but seem to have escaped Western sanctions. How do donors
reconcile support for the constitution-making process with at least
indirect support for those on Western sanctions- lists?
Civil
society organizations and the MDC-T
There is some
consensus among observers and analysts that opposition forces -
local civil society organizations and NGOs and the MDC formations
- have lost steam during the GPA and are in a defensive mode.
Some analysts have accorded donors a role in the weakening of opposition
forces, thus highlighting the unintended consequences of donor aid.
While Raftopoulos
(2010) highlights donors- emphasis on human rights agendas
and the removal of a single leader at the expense of developmental
issues since the emergence of an opposition in the late 1990s, ActionAid
(2010) hints at donor per diems themselves having affected the nature
and character of civic organizations - largely urban-based, and
chiefly Harare-based (like the donor organizations themselves),
seldom membership-based, and as Raftopoulos also notes, heavily
focused on monitoring and reporting. Mindful of the enormous obstacles
to organizing in rural areas where ZANU PF-organized coercion and
patronage still prevail, the report remarks on the astonishing lack
of rural organizations under volunteer leadership that mobilize
against local authorities on the basis of local grievances. ActionAid
comments:
"Even after several
decades of realizing that the political power in Zimbabwe mainly
rests in the rural areas and that the rural areas are host to the
majority of the people needing the largest improvement in livelihood,
the rural areas are practically nude of locally implanted or [locally]
connected CSOs. Some watchdog organizations might have local representatives
in rural areas . . . but it appears that their task is mainly
that as of conduits of information . . . They are rarely autonomous
local leaders linked to a national network."
These broad brush claims
about the impact of donor aid on domestic organized opposition need
to be supplemented or checked against more detailed examinations
of specific organizations. The coexistence of a remarkably subdued
population and an opposition movement that had plenty of donor support
requires careful analysis for its lessons for organized opposition
and democracy-building programs. Did donor support unintentionally
contribute to creating an opposition movement that is not only donor-dependent
but also ill-suited to the type of opposition movement needed to
confront authoritarian rule in the rural hinterland?
Humanitarian
aid
Humanitarian aid has
been critical to the revival of basic service delivery, including
health and education. Most of this aid does not go directly to the
government because Western bilateral donors would like to see more
government progress in the implementation of the GPA. At the end
of 2010, some INGOs told me that they looked forward to the normalization
of donor-government relations as they were accustomed to working
with governments in other environments. Donors have now committed
funds to the African Development Bank for projects that do provide
more scope for government involvement. While criticisms of donors
for not directly funding the government abound, internal and external
actors rarely, if ever, voice criticism of humanitarian aid for
helping to keep alive a government (albeit primarily "one
section of it" as ZANU PF is often referred to in diplomatic
parlance) that has failed to adhere to most provisions of the GPA.
An unfulfilled provision
of the GPA relates to the provision of humanitarian assistance to
internally displaced people (IDPs), yet one seldom, if at all, hears
the international humanitarian community even raise the issue. Article
16.4 (c) of the GPA stipulates "that all displaced persons
shall be entitled to humanitarian and food assistance to enable
them to return and settle in their original homes and that social
welfare organizations shall be allowed to render such assistance
as might be required." IDPs constitute as many as almost 8
per cent of the population (1 million people), making Zimbabwe among
the countries with large percentages of IDPs. (IDMC, 2010) Most
of these IDPs are the product of the previous ZANU PF government-s
actions - farm invasions that displaced farm workers, arbitrary
evictions of people from their homes in cities and towns, evictions
of informal mine workers, and electoral violence. Under the IG,
forced displacement continues, chiefly through ongoing farm invasions
but also arbitrary evictions in areas of mining operations.
When the IG was formed,
it showed some openness to addressing issues of forced internal
displacement but soon retreated. The IG conducted a small-scale
assessment of IDPs with UN agencies in August 2009 but the government
has refused to release the results (IDMC, 2010). Unfortunately,
the MDC parties seem to have no political motivation to challenge
ZANU PF on the issue as the majority of IDPs are farm workers, many
of whom are not even registered to vote. So another component of
the GPA remains unenforced, and unlike those provisions relating
to MDC governmental positions, is largely a suppressed issue. Should
the international humanitarian community advocate for IDPs, a group
that ZANU PF still apparently prefers to treat as if it does not
exist, if seeking government permission to help IDPs might threaten
the provision of humanitarian aid to other sections of the population?
Another serious dilemma
for the humanitarian community is its support for basic services
while ZANU PF loots diamond mining revenue for its own party purposes,
including paying salaries and providing patronage to the security
sector and recently even paying civil servants a salary increase.
The MDC-headed Finance Ministry meanwhile is deprived of control
of a substantial source of revenue. The international humanitarian
community-s logic is presumably that improvement in service
delivery (which remains enormously deficient) not only produces
benefits for the local population but will redound to the credit
of opposition parties which have Ministerial control of services.
But the premise is that there will be a democratic election which
the MDC will win - a prospect that grows dimmer by the day.
At what point does the international humanitarian community say
that the economy is generating enough revenue for the government
to be able to provide basic services to its population?
Conclusion
The politically
charged environment in which donor aid is provided in Zimbabwe and
the role that aid itself plays in inflaming domestic politics should
stimulate rather than mute analysis and debate about the role of
foreign aid. The cases presented above illustrate the unenviable
dilemmas facing foreign donors in Zimbabwe-s difficult operating
environment where well-intentioned aid seems to have unintentionally
contributed to weakening the opposition forces and strengthening
ZANU PF. The road to hell is paved with good intentions and Zimbabwe
seems well along that road for many reasons that have nothing to
do with foreign aid. It is important to know if and how foreign
aid may have unwittingly pushed Zimbabwe perhaps faster and further
along that path and to begin to consider how withdrawal of aid or
its redesign may enable taking a less destructive way.
This article
can be cited in other publications as follows: Kriger, N. (2011)
'Foreign Aid Dilemmas under Zimbabwe-s Inclusive Government-,
12 August, Solidarity Peace Trust: http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/1092/foreign-aid-dilemmas/
References
ActionAid
Denmark, A Gathering Storm: Zimbabwe-s final hope for reform?
December 11, 2010.
Anonymous,
The Anatomy of Terror (June 10, 2011, distributed by Sokwanele).
http://www.sokwanele.com/thisiszimbabwe/archives/6800
(accessed July 29, 2011).
Gourevitch,
Philip, "Alms Dealers: Can you provide humanitarian aid without
facilitating conflicts?", The New Yorker, October 11, 2010.
IDMC, Global
Overview of Trends and Developments in 2010, March 2011 http://www.internal-displacement.org/publications/global-overview-2010.pdf
(accessed July 20, 2011).
Raftopoulos,
Brian, "The Global Political Agreement as a 'Passive
Revolution-: Notes on Contemporary Politics in Zimbabwe",
The Round Table, 99:411, December 14, 2010, 705-718. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2010.530414
(accessed July 20, 2011).
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