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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Zimbabwe:
Voting for progress
Eric Draitser,
Global Research
July 16, 2013
http://www.globalresearch.ca/zimbabwe-voting-for-progress/5342958
Zimbabwe’s
upcoming elections, scheduled to take place on July 31st, will
go a long way to determining the future of the country. On the one
hand, the entrenched power of President Mugabe and Zanu-PF enters
the elections with a track record that both elicits praise and inspires
criticism. On the other hand, there is Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
and his opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) which enters
the election once again with the high-minded rhetoric of “democracy”
and “transparency”, but also with a mixed record that
has many questioning their ability to lead.
With less than
two weeks to go before Zimbabweans go to the polls many questions
remain unanswered: Will the MDC-T boycott the elections due to what
they perceive to be a lack of reforms? Will Zimbabwe be able to
carry out peaceful elections, unlike
in 2008? Are the people of Zimbabwe satisfied with the progress
of land redistribution and other reforms implemented by Mugabe and
Zanu-PF? These are only some of the most pressing questions weighing
on the minds of urban and rural Zimbabweans alike.
Elections:
An economic referendum
Since the creation
of the Zanu-PF/MDC-T inclusive
government after the election in 2008, there has been a marked
change in Zimbabwean politics. No longer is Zanu-PF the sole party
in power and, consequently, the sole party responsible for positive
and negative policy outcomes. Rather, both parties’ respective
leaders enter this year’s elections as incumbents, and both
must face scrutiny over their policies and their actions.
President Mugabe and
Zanu-PF have a difficult fight ahead of them. Despite outside factors
such as sanctions imposed by the US and UK, many Zimbabweans hold
Mugabe and Zanu-PF responsible for the economic difficulties of
the recent past including record inflation which led to the collapse
of the currency and its abolition in favor of the US dollar. The
African Development Bank’s Economic Outlook for Zimbabwe,
published in 2011, notes that, “Inflation is projected to
rise to 6.5% in 2012 and 6.7% in 2013. Inflationary developments
in the short to medium term will continue to be influenced by the
US dollar/rand exchange rate, inflation developments in South Africa,
international oil prices, and local utility charges.”[i] By
adopting the US dollar, Zimbabwe managed to resolve the crippling
plague of inflation, though at the cost of any semblance of monetary
sovereignty.
Unemployment continues
to be one of the principal concerns, particularly among young people,
many of whom fear that any hope for the future is little more than
idle daydreaming. According to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, the
unemployment rate as measured in January 2012 was 10.7%. However,
it must be noted that these numbers, like unemployment rates in
the United States, are likely to be a gross underestimation as they
only consider those actively searching for work as a percentage
of the labor force. Essentially then, the many Zimbabweans who are
officially unemployed but not “actively looking for work”
disappear in these statistics.
According to the CIA
World Fact Book, as well as a number of international NGOs, Zimbabwe’s
true unemployment rate is one of the highest in the world, with
estimates ranging from 50% to as high as 95%. However, these too
are likely to be distorted numbers which do not take into account
the informal economy and the many forms of economic activity that
do not have a place in the official statistics. Moreover, such inflated
data is rooted in the West’s ideological and political desire
to demonize Zanu-PF and foment political upheaval. As Zimbabwe’s
MDC-T Finance Minister Tendai Biti explained in June 2013:
We have always had this
argument about what is the percentage of people that are employed
or unemployed in Zimbabwe. Textbook economists will say 85 percent
but that is not true. If we had a population like that, most people
in Zimbabwe would have died, it is not possible…One is either
a farmer, selling juice cards, driving an emergency taxi, or working
as a hair dresser. The fact of the matter is most people are economically
active.[ii]
Biti’s point is
a valid one. To simply claim that all those people employed in the
informal economy are somehow unemployed is pure dishonesty. However,
the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe’s unemployment figure of less
than 11% is also an exercise in spin. The true unemployment is somewhere
between these two extremes. However, no matter the actual figure,
unemployment continues to be one of the most pressing issues on
the minds of Zimbabweans.
Unlike inflation and
unemployment – problems faced by all countries regardless
of development – there are two particular economic programs
which are specific to Zimbabwe and have a tremendous impact on the
lives of its citizens: Land redistribution and “indigenization”.
The common thread linking these two programs is the creation of
a self-sufficient and economically independent nation.
An inescapable outcome
of European colonial control and imperialism has been the dispossession
of black Africans. By the end of the liberation struggle, the vast
majority of arable land was in the hands of white farmers while
the black population worked the land in the service of the European
landowners. However, by 2000, Mugabe and Zanu-PF began the “fast
track” land program. The results of this program are discussed
in the new book Zimbabwe Takes Back Its Land. The authors explain:
In the biggest land reform
in Africa, 6,000 white farmers have been replaced by 245,000 Zimbabwean
farmers. These are primarily ordinary poor people who have become
more productive farmers. The change was inevitably disruptive at
first, but production is increasing rapidly. Agricultural production
is now returning to the 1990s level, and resettled farmers already
grow 40% of the country’s tobacco and 49% of its maize.[iii]
It should be acknowledged
that the actual distribution of this land was not without problems
and corruption, as some of the best land was seized by force and
through cronyism. However, despite this corruption (a droning talking
point in the mainstream media in the West who attempt to demonize
Mugabe at every turn), the results of the program are undeniable:
Africa’s greatest land redistribution program has created
a new class of farmers forming the backbone of Zimbabwe’s
agricultural output, and its economy.
Like the land reforms
implemented by Mugabe and Zanu-PF, the “indigenization”
program is also designed to increase self-sufficiency and independence
from foreign control. The indigenization program altered the laws
of the country in regards to ownership, mandating that enterprises
deemed in the national interest should be majority owned by Zimbabweans,
not foreign investors, be they white or black. Though the program
was initially mocked, and continues to be met with derision by capitalists
the world over, it has proven to be successful, at least in the
early stages. The indigenization program also is intended to address
unemployment, and specifically youth unemployment which continues
to be a major problem.
These economic issues
are fundamental to the daily lives of regular Zimbabweans. As such,
they will undoubtedly be the issues that impact, more than anything
else, how Zimbabwe votes. However, although economics is on the
minds of everyone, politics have shaped the debate. Unlike in 2008,
when Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC-T were merely the opposition
with no political power, this time around they have to defend their
record on all of the economic policies and more. Likewise, Zanu-PF
has a number of significant political questions to address as it
tries to convince Zimbabweans to continue their commitment and support
for Mugabe and the revolution.
The
politics of progress
Both major parties in
Zimbabwe are attempting to present themselves as reformers interested
in progressive change that will improve the lives of working people
and the poor. However, Zanu-PF and MDC-T employ very different strategies
– policy, rhetoric, ideology, etc. – in order to achieve
substantive positive change. While Mugabe and Zanu-PF tout their
tremendous achievements with land redistribution, indigenization
and nationalization, and other nationalistic policies, Tsvangirai
and the MDC-T rely on the more abstract concepts of democracy, transparency
and anti-corruption, and integration with the world economy, specifically
with the Western powers. These radically different approaches present
Zimbabweans with a very important choice in these elections.
Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvagirai has long since been correctly understood to be the favored
choice of the US and UK. His MDC-T has advocated tirelessly for
economic policies that are geared towards international economic
integration, while blasting all economic policies put forward by
Zanu-PF. Additionally, many Zimbabweans have begun asking precisely
what role the MDC-T has played in the economic assault on the country
through sanctions. In an op-ed piece in the New Zimbabwe, Tobaiwa
Tigere states, “A key reason why ZDERA [Zimbabwe Democracy
and Recovery Act] was passed was to enable to US Secretary of the
Treasury to transfer funds from the US to Zimbabwe to ‘aid
democratic forces in that country’…some estimates put
the dollar value of resources transferred to the MDC-T since ZDERA
was enacted at well over $250 million.”[iv] Additionally,
one should also recall the WikiLeaks documents which “Showed
that he [Tsvangirai] had been privately urging Washington to maintain
sanctions against Harare, while taking the opposite position in
public.”[v] Such facts raise doubts in the minds of many Zimbabweans
who are understandably dissatisfied due to poverty and unemployment,
but who likewise understand that an MDC-T victory is a victory for
Washington, London and Wall St.
Naturally, the amount
of overt and covert support the MDC-T has received from the US and
other Western powers has caused many to wonder what exactly is the
on the agenda of the MDC-T and its backers. The question of regime
change, the favourite tactic of western imperialism in the 21st
Century, is very much out in the open. In fact, President Mugabe
addressed this very point in a recent interview. Speaking about
the need for these elections, Mugabe stated:
We had to demonstrate
to the West that it’s not you who should instruct us to stand
down, ha, regime change does not work. Who are you to want our regime
to change?…But we said no, we fought them yesterday you see,
we can fight them again. We won’t collapse and we didn’t
collapse, we will remain and remain with the leadership they don’t
want…We’re defiant…But we will settle down and
naturally we should allow power to transfer. But we must be assured
that when we transfer that we are well united and we have built-in
strength within the party.[vi]
Here, one can see clearly
the juxtaposition that is at the heart of these elections: Mugabe
and Zanu-PF’s defiance of the western powers and their neocolonial
agenda, and Tsvangirai and MDC-T’s embrace of the neoliberal
capitalist ideology as evidenced by their inextricable link to Western
finance and intelligence.
Tsvangirai and the MDC-T
have stated repeatedly that, despite taking part in the elections,
they are not convinced of their fairness. They have publicly proclaimed
that, without the necessary reforms taking place (media, security,
and electoral reforms), the election will be irrelevant. Deputy
Prime Minister and MDC Vice President Thokazani Khupe explained
in a recent interview that, “As the MDC we are prepared for
election anytime but as long as all these [reforms] are done before
July 31 we don’t have any problems. But there is no way we
can [stand] for an election without these things being done, it
will be a waste of time.”[vii] Such comments merit closer
analysis. On the one hand, it seems that MDC makes an important
point that, in order to have truly fair elections, the playing field
must be levelled. However, seen from another perspective, this is
a cynical ploy utilized by the MDC in order to protect itself against
electoral defeat. By establishing the elections as “fair”
only if the conditions laid out by MDC are met, Tsvangirai’s
party effectively invalidates the election prima facie or, to put
it another way, the MDC invalidates the elections…unless they
win.
The MDC has built its
reputation criticizing Zanu-PF and Mugabe. The party has managed
to win over millions of Zimbabweans who, out of economic desperation,
are willing to listen to anyone offering the hope of a better future.
However, when examined from a purely policy perspective, it becomes
clear that MDC and Prime Minister Tsvangirai have many questions
to answer. First and foremost, the opposition has to explain to
working people why it is that the MDC-T has always sided with the
financiers and neoliberals: they opposed Mugabe’s land programs,
opposed the indigenization program, opposed the mine nationalization
program, and much more. Although these programs were not without
their faults, taken as a whole, they have proven to be successful
and have been supported by the people. Many Zimbabweans wonder why
Tsvangirai always seems to side with the US and the British speculators
and financiers. They are right to wonder.
The rhetoric employed
by Tsvangirai and the MDC is critical. They call for “reform”,
“change”, “transparency” and many other
buzz words of modern democracy. However, the real question before
Zimbabweans is, to what extent are these slogans merely the window-dressing
for opening up the country to vulture capitalists and speculators
who will be able to profit off of Zimbabwe’s resources without
sharing the profits with the people? In this way, MDC-T has a very
serious image problem: they are seen as puppets of the West. Not
only does this have implications for the economic future of the
people and the country, but its political future as well.
The United States has
spent the last few years building its military capacity all throughout
the African continent. The establishment and expansion of US Africa
Command (AFRICOM) has entrenched US military “advisors”
throughout the militaries of the continent, while drone bases like
those in Djibouti and Niger greatly expand US military capacity
on the continent. Additionally, considering their domination of
the African Union, ECOWAS, and other regional groupings, the United
States has cemented a dominant position in Africa. Yet, despite
all the difficulties, Zimbabwe remains untouched by US imperial
presence. How long will such a status quo last if Tsvangirai and
MDC claim power?
As election day approaches,
all of the most pressing issues facing Zimbabweans will come to
the fore. It against the tumultuous political and economic backdrop
of life in that country that the people will make their voices heard.
However, the elections are more than simply a choice between two
political formations. Rather, the elections represent the continuation
of the revolution and the liberation struggle. The heroes who died
for Zimbabwe made the ultimate sacrifice so that the people would
be able to determine their own future, not white European capitalists.
It is upon the ground where they shed their blood for the people,
that the people will cast their votes and decide their future.
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