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ZANU
PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo Behind the Headlines
Lance
Guma, SW Radio Africa
May 30, 2011
ZANU PF spokesman
Rugare Gumbo is the surprise guest Behind the Headlines. SW Radio
Africa journalist Lance Guma questions him on reports that his party
has instructed their negotiators not to entertain any discussion
on an election roadmap or security sector reforms.
Why are they resisting these reforms? Why have they
deployed soldiers and youth militia countrywide? Why are security
chiefs making statements that show no respect for elections? Gumbo
also makes the stunning statement that he does not know of anyone
who died in the run-up to the June 2008 one man presidential run-off.
Lance
Guma: Hallo Zimbabwe and welcome to Behind the Headlines.
Reports currently circulating suggest that Robert Mugabe will use
the next SADC Summit in South Africa to tell regional leaders that
Zimbabwe does not need an election road map and there will be no
security sector reforms. The 87 year old ZANU PF leader will hide
behind the 2008 power
sharing deal and claim it already lays the framework for elections.
Additionally
we are told ZANU PF negotiators have already been instructed not
to enter into any discussions on the election road map or reforms
to the security sector. So we decided to get comment from the ZANU
PF spokesperson Rugare Gumbo and my first question was - have
they already instructed their negotiators not to enter into any
discussions (on a roadmap).
Rugare
Gumbo: No, that is not true. We have not, we merely stated
our position and we hope that when our negotiators go for discussion
they are taking the cue that the party has sort of set, we didn't
instruct them anything.
Lance:
But what's the problem with mapping out a road map to have
fresh elections? People ask what is ZANU PF scared of.
Gumbo: ZANU PF are not scared of anything. I mean
it's just a simple thing. You have a GPA which was negotiated
by the three parties and they all agreed that step one will be constitution
making; step two was going to be the referendum; step three was
elections. So what sort of new road map do we want? That's
what we are saying in ZANU PF . . .
Lance:
Over the last couple of weeks . . .
Gumbo:
. . . because we can't keep negotiating.
Lance: But over the last couple of weeks negotiators
have been in Cape Town mapping out this road map. There's
actually already a draft so it seems you are already making a U-turn
on this.
Gumbo: No we are not making a U-turn. All we are
saying is stick to the GPA as agreed in 2000 and, was it 2008? Yah
2008. So that's what we are saying. How can the negotiators
go and cut new road map when they themselves are the ones who did
it. If there were new negotiators that would be a different matter
but they are the same negotiators that keep negotiating, keep negotiating,
we don't know when is it going to end? You can't have
these things going on ad infinitum when we've agreed that
the GPA was going to last for two years, 18 months to two years.
So that's what we are saying, please, please stick to the
GPA.
Lance: Now we've spoken to Jacob Zuma's
international advisor Lindiwe Zulu, they've clearly also stated
the SADC position that they'd like something much more comprehensive
in terms of reforms and hence these negotiations on the road map
and there's a feeling the GPA on its own is not adequate.
Gumbo: Oh come on. After they had signed? After
the three parties had signed? After the three principals had signed?
And now they are saying it's inadequate? What's going
on here? You know it seems we really don't seem to understand
what we want to achieve in Zimbabwe. People have an agenda you know,
if people have an agenda it's a different matter but if you
want the people of Zimbabwe to have a democratic constitution, participatory
constitution and if you want to have democratic, credible, peaceful
and fair elections you follow what we have agreed upon.
You know how can a negotiator keep negotiating what
they have agreed upon? Negotiating what has been agreed upon? I
mean it's ludicrous. We want something written definitively,
that is why we are saying let's stick to the road map, ah
to the GPA I'm sorry. Why do you want new road map when the
GPA is clear as far as fundamental issues are concerned? People
are bringing exigencies, eh external issues which have nothing to
do with what we agreed upon initially.
So some of us are really tired and fed up of this
inventing the wheel, having a new roadmap with reforms and so on.
Reforms are done by the people of Zimbabwe. Reforms are not done
by outside forces. It is the people of Zimbabwe who have to institute
reforms because the institutions that they have are inadequate.
We understand that? Do you want people coming out, coming to run
the show in Zimbabwe? We can't accept it.
You know we
fought for this country and because we fought for this country we
have to defend this country, we have to defend the institutions
that we created.
We can't have people, some who, where, as a matter of fact
sell-outs, who didn't even fight for this country are now
trying to poke their noses into our, into the affairs of the country.
You know that in Zimbabwe that if you don't have that kind
of integrity, that kind of loyalty to yourself then some of us don't
really think you belong.
Lance:
But some will make the argument that ZANU PF and indeed President
Mugabe, having lost
the elections in March 2008 were saved by the same SADC that
you are now showing a middle finger to.
Gumbo: No, no, no, no, no, we were not saved by
anybody, we saved ourselves. We didn't, yes parliamentary,
we lost but presidential we won.
Lance: But Morgan Tsvangirai did not participate
in the run-off that . . .
Gumbo: He declined, he declined, the space was there,
he declined so he pulled out. Why are we having Mugabe as head of
state?
Lance: Maybe because ZANU PF was able to hang onto
power through violent means.
Gumbo: Ah come on, come on, you know you talk about
these violent things, violence, that's the myth that is out
there. We must demystify this kind of nonsense because it is not
there, it's absolutely ludicrous and nonsense . . .
Lance: But are you denying that people died in the
run up to the June 2008 run-off?
Gumbo: I don't know. People talk about those
things. I don't know. I don't know whether people died
or didn't die but is it a new thing that people could die
in presidential elections? How many people died in Nigeria recently?
How many?
Lance: So because people die in Nigeria, it's
OK for them to die in Zimbabwe?
Gumbo: No, no, no, no we are saying institutions
in Africa are fragile especially when it comes to elections. You
know there'll be all sorts of accusations and all sorts of
figure pointing and yet the reality of the matter is that the election,
the President won overwhelmingly and that is why we are saying let's
go for an election.
You know you say ZANU PF is scared of going to the
election because we have said we need to follow the GPA and MDC
says that we are scared of the election. We are not scared of the
elections, that is why we say if we follow the GPA, have the constitution
making process completed, move onto the referendum and go to elections
this year, what is wrong with that?
Lance: It's being argued Mr. Gumbo that your
party has deployed soldiers, militias and CIOs countrywide and this
is the reason why you are eager to have elections because you cannot
sustain that deployment for too long a period.
Gumbo: Look as I'm talking right now I'm
in my constituency and we had a wonderful meeting, no soldiers,
no nothing, we were just party members and followers and there is
no MDC in my area to talk about.
Lance: Are you denying there are soldiers deployed?
. . . . (Interrupted) . . . Are you denying that there soldiers
deployed? Defense Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa admitted as much although
he said they are retired but are YOU denying there are soldiers
deployed?
Gumbo: No, I don't know of any soldiers which
are deployed. If Mnangagwa is saying so he should say so because
he is the minister of defense perhaps he knows that soldiers are
deployed but as far as I'm concerned, I don't know.
I think what you are mistaken in this because army officers who
have retired and have decided to settle in rural areas, their home
places and at the same time decided to join the party, people are
saying no there are soldiers in the rural areas.
I mean it's not correct. The war veterans,
army officers who have been in the force who go out, should be allowed
to participate in the political activities of a country. It's
not a new thing. In the United Kingdom there was that general who
was in Yugoslavia who is now a member of parliament in Britain.
Most of the American senators, in the congress, are former war veterans
or they are war veterans. So there is nothing new in this whole
thing . . .
Lance: Let me read out a quotation from police commissioner
Augustine Chihuri last year; he said: "This country came through
blood and the barrel of the gun; it can never be re-colonised through
a simple pen which costs as little as five cents." So why
do we bother with elections then if this is the thinking within
the securocrats?
Gumbo: Ah yes, Chihuri is an individual; he is the
police commissioner, that is his view. OK? That is his. As far as
we as a party, we believe in elections, we believe that after every
five years we have to go to elections, every five years we have
to go for elections. We have been doing this since 1980 and we will
continue doing so.
Lance: But these are the people who are in positions
of authority, these are in positions of authority, the army chiefs
have said the same thing and in fact is this not why ZANU PF are
refusing to have any security sector reforms?
Gumbo: Why should you have security sector reforms?
By who?
Lance: To remove people who make irresponsible statements
like this, like police commissioner Chihuri.
Gumbo: Who should reform these security institutions?
An outside force? . . .
Lance: The people of Zimbabwe, the people of Zimbabwe
are able to do that; the parliamentarians are able to do that, they
can do that and reform these institutions and remove people who
make irresponsible statements like this.
Gumbo: Ah come on, get out. I don't accept
that kind of cheap politics. We know your radio, we know the thing
which is there, it's propaganda. . . . nothing more, its propaganda . . .
Lance: But we are Zimbabwean journalists who are
interested in seeing our homeland progress.
Gumbo: You are Zimbabwean, you are a Zimbabwean
journalist who are propagating British and American interests. That's
a fact. That's why you are there . . . .
Lance: What is a British interest in a Zimbabwean
wanting to see a free and fair election? What is British about that?
Is wanting a free and fair election being British?
Gumbo: You want to create a neo-colonial Zimbabwe;
you want the British to come back; you want the farmers to get the
land which they had taken from us illegally, these are the things
which are there..we know . . . .
Lance: Do you have any independent radio stations
that are broadcasting in Zimbabwe?
Gumbo: We don't.
Lance: And why is that?
Gumbo: Why should we have them? Why should we have
them? Propagating what interest?
Lance: So you are okay with radio stations that
propagate ZANU PF's own message?
Gumbo: Your radio is not an independent radio.
Lance: ZBC is independent? Is ZBC independent?
Gumbo: ZBC is a state institution; it's a
state institution; it's Zimbabwean; it's a Zimbabwean
institution; it's not a pirate radio like yours.
Lance: And why does ZBC then simply focus on a message
from one political party?
Gumbo: It's a national institution; what MDC
is doing its covered. It might be covered, it may not be covered
as extensively as ZANU PF for the simple reason that the view which
we have in Zimbabwe is that MDC it's a front for the American
and the British and the Americans, it was created by . . . ..
Lance: When you say the view that we have in Zimbabwe,
is the ZANU PF view the Zimbabwean view? Is that not political intolerance
Mr. Gumbo? People should surely be able to hold their views. There
are those who agree with you and there are those who differ with
you, should we not celebrate our differences instead of labeling
each other?
Gumbo: I agree; that is what it should be, but then
you are advancing, that's where the difference is, some of
you are advancing western interests. You want regime change in Zimbabwe.
You want the farmers, the former white farmers to come back.
Lance: Give me an example, from the interview that
I had with you so far, at which juncture would you say I'm
advancing British interests? Point to something in this interview
that you can say these are British interests.
Gumbo: No, no question, questions of security reforms.
What is it for?
Lance: Because we have a police commissioner who
is showing that he has no respect for elections and you even said
those are his views so . . .
Gumbo: No, no you have quoted him, I, frankly I
don't know what he said but what I know for a fact is that
the police commissioner, the army, everyone is ready for elections
because they, we follow the constitution of Zimbabwe and in this
particular case we follow the GPA.
Lance: OK you are pushing for early elections, does
this mean these elections will come with the voters' roll
having been sorted out, the Zimbabwe Election Commission properly
constituted? Are you going to be doing all these things?
Gumbo: Of course, why not? We need to have those;
we can't have elections without those kind of things, the
voters' roll, voter education, delimitation of constituencies
and so on and so forth. Those have to be done.
Lance: Well Mr. Rugare Gumbo, thank you for your
time and we hope this interview will be the beginning of more interviews
as Zimbabweans tolerate each other's differences.
Gumbo: No, no, no, thank you very much. I always
like to accommodate different opinions, that is why I'm also
giving you this interview, I wouldn't have given you this
interview but I wanted you to know where we stand, where I stand,
where the party stands.
Lance: Well that was a surprise guest indeed on
Behind the Headlines, ZANU PF's spokesperson Rugare Gumbo
joining us on the programme.
You can listen
to the programme here: http://swradioafrica.streamuk.com/swradioafrica_archive/bth300511.wma
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