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Prime Minister Odinga to 3rd MDC Congress
Raila Odinga
April 28, 2011
The Right Honorable
Morgan Tsvangirai, Prime Minister of the Republic of Zimbabwe and
President of the Movement for Democratic Change;
Party officials,
distinguished delegates,
Let me begin
by congratulating my friend Morgan on his re-election last week
as president of this great party. On behalf of my own party, the
Orange Democratic Movement, I salute both you and your party supporters
for the confidence shown in your leadership.
I congratulate
those elected to other leadership positions. Their mandate means
assuming major national responsibilities. The first of these is
to unite the party. The second is to unite the people of Zimbabwe
in a single vision of universal prosperity.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Zimbabwe and Kenya have experienced very similar histories since
independence - of heroic peoples struggling for liberation from
oppression and repression.
Many Zimbabweans,
like many Kenyans, have paid the ultimate price for a future worth
having, dying in order that the nation might live. We share heartfelt
grief and respect for their sacrifice.
We have other
similarities and links. Several Kenyan leaders were educated here.
When Zimbabwe gained independence, a number of Kenyans helped in
establishing its key institutions and government structures.
It is this kind
of bond that makes us partners in democracy and in moving our continent
forward. Our respective liberation wars have shown how a downtrodden
people can rise up and demand respect. That spirit lives in your
party. It must radiate across the nation.
But what, ladies
and gentlemen, has happened to the Africa whose liberation our struggles
typified? As we look round, we see, to our dismay, nothing but contradictions
and paradoxes.
Africa, with
its 51 independent states and 52nd about to be born, is a continent
of great cultural diversity. It is rich in natural resources - minerals,
freshwater lakes, rivers and forests.
But it is also
the poorest of the continents, with the highest child mortality
rates and levels of inequality and the lowest human development
indices. Some blame colonial rule, others the faulty domestic policies
pursued by African leaders.
This blame game
is taking us nowhere. I have spent my entire adult life somewhere
on the political spectrum - as an observer, an activist, a three-time
detainee, a member of parliament, a cabinet minister and now prime
minister of my country. I have had much time for analysis and reflection.
Of course colonialism
messed up Africa, arbitrarily dividing our people, sapping their
confidence and pride and exploiting our resources! Of course many
African leaders have performed dismally!
But 40 or 50
years since many African nations attained independence, we cannot
continue blaming the colonialists for our problems. Since the 1990s,
a clear consensus has emerged both within and outside Africa that
the problems the continent faces have to do with the way it is governed
today.
This has led
to human rights abuses, the breakdown of the rule of law, the over-centralisation
of power, particularly as vested in imperial presidencies, and the
accompanying cultures of corruption and impunity.
Powerful leaders
and their close associates have done as they wished, in the knowledge
that nothing would happen to them. Lack of accountability and transparency
has fostered official corruption and the plundering of resources
meant for development. It is these insidious developments - and
not the colonial legacy - that have brought this continent to the
brink of ruination, and its people to the desperate situation in
which so many millions find themselves today.
But I speak
to you as an Afro-optimist and a true believer in pan-Africanism,
one who looks forward to the day Africa will be united in its irreversible
democratic ideals and sound socio-economic policies.
And on this
occasion of the MDC's National Convention, I would like to share
with you my thoughts on two issues that I strongly believe can help
us turn the tide.
The first is
that Africa must embrace the culture of constitutionalism. It must
invest in the building of institutions that promote and compel sound
leadership.
That a constitution
is indispensable in a modern society is underlined by the fact that
the struggle for the second liberation in Africa, which began in
the early 1980s, has centred on demand for the enactment of new
constitutions. That was our aim in Kenya and it is no less true
of Zimbabwe.
We have seen
that the mere re-introduction of multi-party politics in Africa,
after decades of single-party and military dictatorships, has not
solved the governance problem. We have seen that multi-party elections
alone will not propel us from institutionalised authoritarian systems
to more democratic modes of governance.
Not that constitutions
of themselves are inviolable. We have not been without constitutions.
We have had them, but they have been repeatedly amended at the whim
of the ruling elite, and have sustained and entrenched powerful
presidents whose word has been law, and who have used their power
not for the nation's benefit but for their own enrichment. Where
such leaders have refused to give way through the ballot - and let's
face it, that is, most of them - military dictatorships have sometimes
ensued, and these have fared no better.
In short, political
power in Africa has often meant gain and riches for the ruling class
and more poverty, deprivation and powerlessness for the ordinary
person.
We had hoped
that new constitutions - new beginnings by the leaders of the Second
Liberation, mandated by a better-educated electorate that increasingly
knows what it wants and has no qualms about asking for it - would
instill in leaders new respect for the laws that govern their lands.
One of the great
disappointments of the Second Liberation has been that many of the
new liberators changed their tune once they got into power. They
began to manipulate constitutions to prolong their rule, and coerced
their parties into securing support for additional terms or eliminating
opponents. Institutionalised corruption, instead of receding, loomed
larger than ever.
That brings
me to the second problem. Africa has truly been left wanting when
it comes to visionary leadership, the kind of leadership that is
undistracted in its quest for solid institutions committed to constitutionalism,
equity and impartiality. We have failed to elect leaders dedicated
to ignoring tribe, religion, region and race in the management of
public affairs.
One-party rule
might have withered and died with the introduction of political
pluralism in the 1990s but its ugly monolithic vestiges linger.
In particular, our ballots have yet to be free and fair. A long
list of African leaders with questionable democratic credentials
has used the pretension of promoting state unity as an excuse for
excess, intolerance, repression, and illegal tenure of office.
This looks more
dangerous than our previous situation. What could be worse than
the electorate choosing how and by whom they should be governed,
only for their verdict to be ignored? When leaders and governments
lack popular support, democracy and good governance cannot be expected,
and nations cannot move forward.
This is the
tragedy that afflicts Africa today.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Zimbabwe must move quickly to resolve its democratic challenges,
so that it can take its rightful place as a potential centre for
economic growth in this part of the continent.
All parties,
and particularly the MDC, which will be a critical player, need
to invest in building institutions of democracy.
Party policy,
and its wholehearted approval by party members, will be one of the
keys to success. And no one must ever forget that good resolutions
and declarations are fine in themselves but they are not tantamount
to victory. That will only come when party structures and processes
are people-driven, genuine and devoid of corruption, and provide
a clear process for seeking the people's mandate.
Your party must
be not only the maker but also the keeper of the promise.
Ladies and gentlemen,
finally, as the leader of a party that is, like yours, in a coalition
government, I would urge you, as you prepare for the next elections,
not to lose sight of the fact that you are in government, and you
have government policies to pursue and to deliver.
You will have
to dig deep into your reservoirs of tolerance and compromise to
ensure that this happens, for the alternative would serve neither
the MDC nor its partner in government. It would only cripple the
nation.
I know it is
not easy. But we in Kenya, having reaped a harvest of chaos and
death after our disputed 2007 elections, have managed to make useful
strides forward. Our Grand Coalition government promulgated a new
Constitution last year and is in the process of enacting every part
of it. It has not always been an easy alliance, but the spirit of
give and take has so far allowed us to make it work.
I commend it
to you.
Thank you very
much for allowing me this opportunity to share a few thoughts with
you here today.
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