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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Zanu
PF's about turn on proposed constitution: Two basic lessons
for the MDC
National Constitutional Assembly (NCA)
January
24, 2008
In its typical style,
the Zimbabwe African National Union (Patriotic Front) (ZANU PF)
has left the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) licking its wounds
after it remained adamant that the March 2008 elections will not
be held under the draft constitution that resulted from the SADC
initiated dialogue process. Two critical lessons for MDC emerge
from this latest development. ZANU PF can never be trusted. And
it is of absolute necessity that a movement be continually guided
by its founding principles.
Prior to the
ZANU PF's ultimate openness on the fate of the Welshman Ncube,
Tendai Biti, Patrick Chinamasa and Nicholas Goche driven draft constitution,
the MDC has been spreading the hope that the forthcoming elections
will be fought under this draft. It is within the confines of this
kind of hope that the MDC was plunged into sponsoring the passage
of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe amendment (No. 18) Act through parliament. Within
the same imprisonment of hope and expectation, the MDC also agreed
to veneer changes to the Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) and the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). Being
caught up in the same web of talks and talks with ZANU PF, the country's
main opposition party has also apparently failed to utilize the
prevailing water, energy and cash crisis as a platform through which
to further compromise ZANU PF's perilous and precarious hold
on power.
"The fact that
the MDC is clamoring for this four men constitution speaks to a
deviation from principle that has left it exposed to the realities
of ZANU PF deception."
Now that ZANU PF has
done what it has been prone to doing, the MDC is expected to have
learnt its lesson. No Elections under a new constitution! No postponement
of elections! This is what ZANU PF has declared leaving MDC in a
new quandary. As they try to dust themselves after set another fall,
MDC politicians must surely have learnt never to invest trust in
ZANU PF. If in doubt of the necessity of this lesson, the MDC might
as well appeal to history. What happened to the then PF ZANU on
22 December 1987 is there for all with eyes to see. If the leaders
of MDC choose not to learn from ZANU PF's latest act of deception,
another national holiday may soon be declared in commemoration of
the opposition party' s demise.
More importantly, the
MDC must be deriving a critical lesson on the need for it to be
continually guided by its founding principles as it seeks political
power. Of contextual relevance is the principle relating to the
need for a new, democratic and people-driven constitution that can
help bring democracy and development in Zimbabwe. As history testifies,
the MDC has its roots in the constitutional movement whose foundation
was the birth of the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA) in 1997.
The fundamental principle behind this movement is that of a democratic
constitution that is by the people and for the people. A constitution
that is conceived by four individuals is not the People-driven constitution
that the MDC was established to fight for. The fact that the MDC
is clamoring for this four men constitution speaks to a deviation
from principle that has left it exposed to the realities of ZANU
PF deception.
Now the MDC finds itself
having to be reminded by hypocrites in ZANU PF that the constitution
must come from the people. Now the MDC can no longer be trusted
by erstwhile allies in civic society. More seriously, the MDC finds
itself ideologically compromised. To progressively come out of this
make or break scenario, the MDC must self introspect and re-engage
the people.
Visit the NCA
fact
sheet
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