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Zanu PF culprit: Welshman
Tonderai
Kwenda, Daily News
July 10, 2011
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/index.php/news/34-news/3196-zanu-pf-culprit-welshman.html
The Daily News on Sunday deputy News Editor, Tonderai
Kwenda spoke to Welshman Ncube, the leader of the breakaway MDC
formation. TK - Tonderai Kwenda, WN - Welshman Ncube
TK:
Do you think the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) was the only solution to the country's
political problem?
WN:
We were the strongest proponent of dialogue as a way of solving
problems when no one in Zanu PF not even the MDC T, not in civic
society, not in the international community believed that a solution
to Zimbabwe's problems was by way of a coalition government.
The polarisation in 2008 made it virtually impossible
to realise democracy in this country and therefore there was a need
for a cooling period.
We want a situation where we can have competitive
politics. We can not have a situation where political party ''A''
believes that political party ''B'' can
never be allowed to be in power.
Democracy must imply a willingness to allow the
people's verdict to prevail even if you believe the people
are wrong, even if you believe it is not in the national interest.
But where you have political parties which say if
it is not us we must basically burn down the country and you can
not have a democracy like that.
We strongly believe that it is not in the best interest
of Zimbabwe for Zanu PF and MDC T to be elected, but we are willing
to say if that is the verdict of the people, even if it is a wrong
verdict let the people live with their mistake.
They will have another opportunity in five years
to correct it but we have a political situation where there is intolerance
to say that unless it is us lets burn down the country.
TK: From what you are saying it seems the coalition
government you believed in so much is in trouble?
WN: We had hoped that the inclusive government will
change this but regrettably that has not happened.
Since the beginning
of the year we have basically regressed to the intolerance
of 2008. There is no point in getting to elections with polarisation
and intolerance. The biggest culprit in all this is Zanu PF.
If they had demonstrated a little sincerity to work
with others without putting roadblocks on everything the better.
They do not want to share governors, they do not want to share ambassadors,
they do not want to open up so that we can have security forces
in the country which treat all political parties as legitimate institutions
of Zimbabwe.
It is this lack of sincerity which has undermined
the premise of the GPA.
TK: How was it like negotiating this difficult political
agreement?
WN: There were tensions, very severe tensions from
time to time but there was a spirit of co-operation and criticism
of each other, but often this was fair.
The situation was helped by the fact that the key
players in the negotiations had worked together even though from
different political formations for a long time particularly myself
Tendai Biti and Patrick Chinamasa.
TK: Do you have any regrets?
WN: The only regret was that towards the end, we
got tired and wanted to get over with it and in the process overlooked
some things particularly on the media.
Our failure to create an independent commission
to deal with the electronic media as we had done in creating the
media commission to deal with the print media is one regret.
Largely, the problem is not the construction of
the GPA, it is the lack of sincerity among the players in the inclusive
government.
TK: So what exactly is troubling the coalition government
if the document is perfect?
WN: The problem has largely been the security sector.
If we had a security sector sincerely and genuinely committed to
bringing to an end to political violence in this country it would
have brought it to an end.
The challenge is not that Zanu PF people beat others
or MDC T people beat each other or others. It is given that young
people at the instigation of politicians think that they can get
away with violence in order to get political advantage.
The key is how do the police react or respond if
they acted firmly against every perpetrator of violence regardless
of which party they are from. If that was done we will not have
political violence in this country.
The police have failed to act decisively and firmly
and are in fact themselves on a blame game.
We have a list of people from both MDC parties who
have been beaten, brutalised and their assailants are known by name,
by residence and if police genuinely applied the rule of law and
acted against these people, we would today have a much better political
environment. In June 2008, Harare, was under siege.
People disappeared, were tortured, and were dying.
At that time there was a real possibility that we were headed the
Somalia route.
TK: Do you think security sector reform is an urgent
necessity to solve these problems that the coalition government
is facing?
WN: I hate the term security sector reform because
it connotes that the legal policy framework under which the security
forces operate is wrong. But I believe there is nothing fundamentally
wrong with our constitution to the extent that it deals with the
police and the army.
There is nothing wrong with our Defence Act and
the Police Act. You could take these and put them in South Africa,
they will compare favourably, but look at the rules and the policies
on paper that should be followed by the police, you will hardly
be able to improve on them.
It is the individuals we have assigned the responsibilities
to administer these laws and policies.
These are individuals who for better or worse historically
have not transformed mentally from being an armed wing of a political
party to being a professional police force or to being a professional
army for the whole of Zimbabwe.
TK: In your view how the secret service should be
regulated given that there is no known policy to regulate its activities?
WN: Where you might have a legitimate debate on
reform is the intelligence services. Should they be regulated by
an act of parliament or should they simply be regulated as part
of the President's office.
If you do a research, you will realise that almost
half of the countries in the world have pieces of legislation regulating
the intelligence services.
But for me it does not matter whether there is regulation
of the intelligence service because where we have legislation like
with the police would not make any difference as long as they do
not have a commitment to live in accordance with the laws and policies
that we have.
TK: You have been championing the idea of a united
front against Mugabe, what is the reasoning behind the idea?
WN: Our party even after the painful split said
in spite of our differences we should acknowledge them and genuinely
deal with them.
We none the less said we can still try and work
together in the things that we agree on and acknowledge the things
that we are unable to agree on and that is why we went out of our
way to try and build a coalition and that is why we negotiated and
agreed on a coalition which would have seen all of us supporting
Tsvangirai as our presidential candidate.
Our national council, which is the supreme organ
of our party, adopted that and endorsed it in 2008 but MDC T rejected
it on the eve of the election which is why even as we walked into
that election, we were left on a lurch having put so much effort
even in the 4 or 5 months to the election.
We had put on our best people, our best minds to
those negotiations and neglected doing a lot of work on the ground
as a party because we thought it was more important for us to be
in the coalition but we later found out that we were wrong.
The end result was that we ended up without a presidential
candidate, we ended up without candidates in some of the areas because
we thought we could build a coalition so our commitment to that
has never wavered.
We have always believed in that but we can not achieve
it without being realistic enough to realise that the obstacles
to that are very huge and are immense which is why we have said
this time round we will not put our best people and we will not
devote a great deal of our time to the pursuit of that, we will
devote our time and our best minds to our people and rebuilding
our party which is what we are trying to do as a political party.
But we will always be open as a political party
any time for any conversation around working together with anybody
else in the things we believe in so we are open on that.
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