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Could
Zimbabwe end up like Syria
Clifford Chitupa
Mashiri
November 19, 2011
With the exception of the suspension of Malema by the ANC of South
Africa for 5 years for bringing the party into disrepute, there
was not much of good news from Southern Africa in the week ended
11/11/11.
However, there
are fears that the Zimbabwe crisis could end up in a bloody uprising
like the one in Syria, where the United Nations said Tuesday the
death toll had reached 3,500.
There are a
number of reasons why that prospect appears likely under the prevailing
circumstances starting with the shock agreement by the three principals
to hold elections as early as possible regardless of stalled electoral
and constitutional reforms.
The other reasons
are Mugabe-s 9 Singapore visits so far this year alone; Kasukuwere-s
threat of violent company grab; increased state paranoia; reluctance
to reform security sector among others, coupled with General Nyikayaramba-s
utterances.
While Mugabe-s
Singapore visits have paralysed government as Cabinet has rarely
met to deliberate on urgent government business due to the absence
of its sole chairman, in the event of him dying in office, all hell
will break loose.
One of the stalled
duties of the President is to call by-elections in 18 vacant seats
in the House of Assembly and Senate including Lupane East, Nkayi
South and Bulilima East which have been vacant since August 2009,
meaning that the 18 constituencies have no voice in Parliament.
According to
Veritas, since the present Parliament first met on 26th August 2008
neither members of the House of Assembly nor Senators have been
paid their sitting allowances and the fixing of such allowances
is the responsibility of the President (absentee president!).
For some reason
Zanu-PF is reluctant to face reality that all is not well with Mugabe
who reportedly arrived an hour late for the graduation ceremony
at the National
University of Science and Technology in Bulawayo on Thursday
and capped the graduates in groups rather than individually.
Proposed amendments
to Zimbabwe-s electoral and human rights laws are unlikely
to see the light of the day after their expiry at the end of the
last Parliament session in August which sat on 48 occasions from
13/07/10 to 05/09/11 in the case of the House of Assembly sat while
the Senate sat on 33 occasions.
Increased State
paranoia manifests in many ways including the police
raid on an Oxfam meeting at the Bronte Hotel, in Harare briefly
arresting 10 foreign nationals and several workers of the British
charity ahead of possible bloody elections amid reports of a looming
famine in most of Matabeleland South, Midlands, and parts of Masvingo
and Manicaland provinces.
The threat by
Zanu-PF Indigenisation Minister Saviour Kasukuwere on Friday 11/11/11
to deal heavily with black employees working for foreign firms who
refuse to be part of his controversial company grab scheme only
helps to make the situation more tense. The timing of his threats
and the Zanu-PF conference in Bulawayo next month is not accidental.
Generals loyal
to Robert Mugabe reiterated Friday that they won-t entertain
any talk of security sector reforms in Zimbabwe. Speaking at the
28th anniversary of the Presidential Guard in Harare, Major General
Chedondo charged that security sector reform was a way by which
Rhodesians are trying to effect illegal regime change through the
inclusive government. They have also said they won-t salute
anyone who did not fight for liberation.
The recent threats
by controversial 3 infantry Brigade commander, Brigadier General
Douglas Nyikayaramba that he will deploy soldiers to deal with those
villagers who "disrespect" the authority of local partisan
chiefs are another cause for concern.
The analogy
with Syria could work like this, democracy uprisings erupt in Harare
and spread throughout the country. Mugabe loyalists in the Joint
Operations Command would then respond with fire and casualties mount.
That would be
followed by SADC dithering on expelling Zimbabwe in the same way
the Arab League did in the case of Syria, then eventually suspend
the country after maybe 3,500 people killed as the West watches
helplessly fearing criticism of another Libya, Iraq or Afghanistan.
And so on.
With so much
repressive legislation on the books making it impossible to demonstrate
and express oneself freely and faced with elections based on a flawed
voters- roll, the only route left possible for effecting change
looks like the equivalent of Tahir Square - or Zimbabwe-s
Africa Unity Square!
Nobody wishes
a bloody uprising in any country including Zimbabwe. But that scenario
looks more plausible than ever before.
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