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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
14
years of catastrophic leadership
Blessing
Vava
August 08, 2013
http://blevava.blogspot.com/2013/08/14-years-of-catastrophic-leadership.html
Zimbabwe finally
conducted its 7th
general election on the 31st of July 2013, however with an outcome
that left both the winners and losers in shock. As we approached
the polling day, there were notions thrown all over on the lack
of preparedness, lack of funding and some citing the inadequacy
of key reforms for the conduct of a credible poll. Many will recall
that as early as 2010 Zanu-PF was already calling for elections
despite the fact the fulfillment of the Global
Political Agreement was yet to be realised. Zanu-PF was determined
to have elections at whatever cost. Even their 2010 conference resolutions
at Marymount Teachers held on from the 15-19th of December, the
party insisted. ‘The party resolves that at the expiry of
the term of the Global Political Agreement with the two MDC formations
on the 15th of September 2008, and the inclusive
government born from there from on 13 February 2009, the country
must hold harmonised elections...’ read their conference resolutions.
Every conference held December yearly would come with the same resolutions
that elections must be held in March of the following year. The
Bulawayo 2011 conference carried the same message the Gweru conference
re-affirmed in 2012. And it was the completion of the constitution
making process that gave Zanu-PF the salvo to insist on an early
poll, also mindful of the reality that the parliament was expiring
on the 29th of June.
And all these
years this party (Zanu-PF) was putting its machinery in-order in
preparation for the elections, they never rested. However, as for
the MDC-T the massive defeat shocked them because they never expected
such a drabbing. It came to them like a veld fire, and as usual
they were caught napping with no clue, no strategy or plan and one
wonders why they hadn’t learnt from the experiences of the
previous elections since 2000. One would have thought and expected
that the 2008 poll experience was sufficient a learning curve for
the MDC-T
Of empty
promises
Despite childish
and kindergarten threats by the party’s youth leadership,
who, during their rallies, got excited and declared that they were
ready to defend the vote in the event of an unfavourable outcome
they seemed to have prophesied. With the shocking unfavourable outcome,
the MDC youth assembly top-brass have now resorted again to making
empty threats on Facebook, venting their anger and plastic bravery
to defend what they term a ‘stolen’ vote. Funny, how
a spineless lot make such noise. My brother in-arms Job Sikhala
dismissed them as cowards who cannot even mobilise a fly. Many will
recall the noise they made when some of their party activists were
arrested in Glen View, two years ago and there was the youth assembly
threatening to floods the streets demanding the release of the jailed
activists. The MDC youth leadership needs to come to terms with
reality and admit that they are a spineless lot who are good at
making empty threats when excited by a crowd during campaigns. What
this lot fails to realise is that their supporters had trust in
them that they would protect their vote. The same can be said of
its mainstream leadership especially the party’s president
Tsvangirai who at Chibuku Stadium declared; “Let me tell you
now, no-one will stand in the way to block your aspirations. This
vote will count. Just get out in your numbers and cast your vote.
With your help, I will defend the vote,” What is important
here is to note the absence and backtracking on these promises at
a time MDC-T supporters are over and about yearning for a sterner
leadership and direction.
Like in all
the elections they participated (MDC), routinely, it has become
a habit to dispute the results, rush to the courts to challenge
the outcome but experience should have taught them by now that it’s
merely a waste of time. Zimbabwe’s electoral environment has
still not changed, and the MDC was very much aware of the state
of the media, the absence of the voters’ roll to mention a
few, but foolishly they still participated expecting to win. People
recall that in 2008 MDC-T had cited irregularities with the voters’
roll yet they spent 5years in government paying little if any attention
to its redress with the exception of course of lip-service at rallies.
What is striking is their audacity to enter an election without
a voters roll and come out crying. Hope is an integral part for
human survival and movement building but when hope is based on fictitious
imaginations it becomes foolishness. Clearly the party is lacking
a critical and robust leadership, they based their strategy on disillusioned
prophecy, that, Mugabe is too old and will die and they will take
over. What nonsense!! The dictates of realpolitik clearly state
that the essence of a political party is to assume power based on
a grand strategy and not these prophetic hallucinations of a promised
land on a silver platter. They never thought Mugabe would spearhead
his campaign. He seemed even more organised than Tsvangirai, whose
campaign was void of clear policies rather than insults even to
the people he was seeking votes from. The dramatisation of Mugabe’s
age in this election was equally striking it became the MDC-T anthem
yet the electoral process had a more important aspect which was
the electoral playing field.
The reality
of the matter was that this election was beyond the scope of the
voter. All that mattered was the mechanisms that had been put in
place ahead of the election; this is where the MDC failed Zimbabweans.
The constitution that they helped author backfired barely six months
after its adoption. As they celebrated the ‘YES’ vote
in a referendum that had a lot of irregularities, they rubber-stamped
a Zanu-PF victory in the elections. Indeed, it was the cosmetic
approach to the so-called reforms that characterised their stay
in the inclusive government.
Equally important
to note that the MDC was aware of this reality but they put their
faith in morality, in essence they failed to safeguard what could
have been their edge. The grand question is how one attaches morality
when dealing with a perceived immoral megalomaniac. In all their
campaigns they gave false sense of security to the voters only to
show their cluelessness at a press conference. Even when Wananchi
(Biti) released the money for elections a few days before the polls
were held was a clear show of confidence of victory.
Now that the
results are out they have so far indicated some of their strategies.
They have indicated that they are approaching the courts; however,
their court appeal is definitely not going to see the light of the
day, basing on the nature of our judiciary system, with all the
judges being appointees of the President. Also reminding them how
the MDC-T leadership has been thrashing the courts left right and
centre. They surely must not expect a favourable ruling. The same
with the SADC/AU appeals, all these bodies had observers on the
ground and declared that the elections were free credible, the MDC
must expect the same response from them. The jurisprudential precedence
of challenging electoral outcomes on incumbents will surely manifest
itself. This is another clear defeat and misplaced case of hope.
Apart from that,
as a strategy also, I’m told that the party had considered
absconding parliament in protest of the election results, a move
which was likely to be defied by most elected officials. Of course
to most of them it was more of the individual interests rather than
political. This I say because the MDC is not a vanguard party, but
a movement of disgruntled fellows in which anyone can call the shots,
unlike Zanu-PF.
Morgan Tsvangirai
has failed to offer decisive leadership, his cluelessness and pampering
of the masses with a prophecy that Mugabe will die in 2months will
simply demobilise what could be an agitated electorate. Politics
requires an astute leadership that seizes opportunities and redirects
them with concise aptitude. Above all he owes Zimbabweans an apology
for conniving with Zanu-PF in rail-roading them to adopt a constitution
that gave too much power to the President (typical of the Zvogbo
1987 creation of the executive presidency). The MDC lied to the
masses that the new constitution was a yardstick to a credible election
and would ensure ‘democratic consolidation.’ No one
will forget in March this year before the referendum when Tsvangirai
and Mutambara were paraded by Mugabe to announce and defend the
appointment of Rita Makarau as the ZEC chairperson. To many of us
we remained skeptical, but however, the former Prime Minister repeatedly
assured us that Rita Makarau’s appointment was ‘unanimous’
and ‘progressive.’ And also that he (Tsvangirai) was
confident that ZEC will efficiently run the referendum and the elections.
Such are the pitfalls of misplaced faith! We wonder why he is now
attacking an institution he set-up?
The
Future: Progress vs. Regression
Reality must
also quickly don in his mind that he has failed and its time to
give others a chance. It’s good to leave with the little remaining
dignity rather than to be embarrassed again in the 2018 elections.
You have played your part Morgan, history will record that there
was once a courageous man who led a once vibrant movement, but failed
to be the president of the country. The more he will hang on the
more disintegrated the MDC will become. Surely it is evident that
the centre can no longer hold anymore. Staying longer will just
produce the same Zanu-PF culture that the people are fighting. Leaders
must come and go, pave way for fresh blood with new ideas and strategies
For Zanu- PF
this election result was a good farewell to Mugabe, his legacy has
been restored and indeed the succession headaches in Zanu-PF will
no-longer trouble him. He will deal with it in his own time and
pace, whatever will happen to him between now and 2018, no longer
matters, whether he resigns or dies in office during this period
a Zanu-PF president will take over. Woo, the new constitution scrapped
the bi-election for president, Zimbabweans will be governed by a
ghost they did not elect. This is why the party was pushing so hard
for elections to be held early no matter what circumstances.
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