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MDC
bruised but not yet beaten
IRIN News
December 13, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75759
Zimbabwe's opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) is in trouble: already split
into feuding factions, it now risks being deserted by its key allies
ahead of next year's elections.
Labour movement and civil
society groups are concerned over the 'compromises' the MDC has
made in low-key talks with the ruling ZANU-PF party, and a growing
intolerance within the opposition party, underlined by reports of
intimidation and violence against members, analysts say.
Since its formation in
1999, the MDC has presented itself as the democratic alternative
to ZANU-PF. Three lost elections later - the polls in 2000 and 2002
were widely condemned as flawed - and decidedly gloves-off treatment
by the authorities, have left it bruised, but not yet out.
In recognition that a
political solution is required to help ease Zimbabwe's economic
and humanitarian crisis, the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) urged both sides into talks in March, mediated by South Africa.
It was the first time the MDC has won legitimacy from regional leaders,
who are concerned that Zimbabwe's meltdown represents a security
and humanitarian risk to its neighbours.
The problem
for the MDC's erstwhile supporters is that it appears to have made
all the political sacrifices so far, analysts say. At ZANU-PF's
urging in September it accepted Constitutional
Amendment No. 18, which potentially extends President Robert
Mugabe's term in office, but won no guarantees on its demands to
halt political violence and repeal legislation widely seen an undemocratic.
And then there has been
the MDC's internal politics. The party split over leader Morgan
Tsvangirai's handling of a vote by senior members of the party to
participate in senate elections in 2005; last month the labour movement
cut ties with Tsvangirai's faction after the popular leader of the
MDC's women's wing, Lucia Matibenga, was removed from her post.
Nelson Chamisa, spokesman
for the Tsvangirai faction, blamed fifth columnists for stoking
the unrest. "Zimbabweans should be aware of a deliberate effort
by ZANU-PF agents to soil and malign the image of [party] president
Tsvangirai and the MDC ahead of crucial elections," he told
IRIN.
However, Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) secretary-general Wellington
Chibhebhe said there was a perception that the Tsvangirai faction
was trying to erase its labour origins. He told IRIN that "The
removal of Matibenga is the clearest sign that the party is no longer
representing the interests of workers."
Betrayal
Lovemore Madhuku,
chair of the National
Constitutional Assembly, a pro-democracy non-governmental organisation,
said that by endorsing Constitutional Amendment No. 18 rather than
wholesale reform of the country's magna carta, the MDC had put the
party first, ahead of the people of Zimbabwe.
"As civic society,
we felt betrayed by the MDC's endorsement of the constitutional
amendments without consulting us. We have always believed that they
were there for us," Madhuku told IRIN. "The MDC has always
been aware that as civic society we stand for a people-driven constitution,
and that we are against the piecemeal constitutional amendments
which they are now supporting."
The constitutional amendment
voted for by MDC MPs harmonises presidential, parliamentary and
local elections. It could also extend Mugabe's term by two years
until 2010 - giving him far greater flexibility in choosing a successor,
an issue that has undermined ZANU-PF unity.
However, the Tsvangirai
faction has questioned the purpose of continued dialogue with ZANU-PF
when it is unlikely that the ruling party will ever deliver on the
demands for electoral reform, and repeal laws that limit proper
campaigning. But the MDC risks being sidelined once more by the
SADC, should it boycott the talks, political analyst Eldred Masunungure
told IRIN.
General elections
are tentatively due in March, which Mugabe and ZANU-PF are widely
expected to win against a demoralised opposition. "The signs
of voter apathy are beginning to emerge around the country,"
said Rindai Chipfunde-Vava, executive director of the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), a civic organisation promoting
democratic elections.
ZESN is holding nationwide
community workshops, where "questions on how political parties
can deliver democracy at national level, if they cannot ensure democracy
in their political parties, have been raised often."
Madhuku said the MDC
could wind up being abandoned by its original constituency. "We
[civic society] are going to reorganise and realign all the democratic
forces in the post-election period. We know Mugabe will still be
in power next year, and we have to be ready to face him after the
elections."
Zimbabwe is stuck in
a seven-year recession, triggered in part by the economic fallout
from the government's controversial land-reform programme and disputed
elections in 2000.
Its inflation rate is
the highest the world, eight out of 10 people have no formal employment,
nutrition levels are deteriorating, and food, fuel and electricity
shortages are commonplace. The government blames western "sanctions"
for the crisis, as part of a deliberate policy to unseat Mugabe.
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