Wednesday 28 January 2009

Diplomacy can triumph in Zimbabwe and the future belongs to us not Mugabe – Rashweat Mukundu

Diplomacy can triumph in Zimbabwe and the future belongs to us not Mugabe – Rashweat Mukundu

On 28 January South Africa’s e-TV showed pictures of emaciated Zimbabwean prisoners and rural families, many sick and dying from lack of food and medication. The pictures and accompanying news story were a stark reminder of the dire situation in Zimbabwe at the time that Southern Africa leaders had completed a meeting on finding a lasting solution to the crisis in Zimbabwe.

The e-TV story is particularly interesting as it shows in clearer terms the issue(s) in Zimbabwe, that the crisis is about livelihoods and people. While a lot has been written about how the crisis is man made, and Mugabe’s intransigence and his total disregard of any civilised political processes, the issue in my view remains that the people of Zimbabwe have reached the end of the tether and cannot hang on any longer. While the SADC summit was concluded in South Africa, reports were already emerging on how the MDC has not consented to the communiqué and how the breakthrough, is after all a false one. This message of doom was conveyed mostly by the foreign media with newspapers as the Telegraph in the UK carrying opinions supporting the MDC not to join Mugabe in a unity government. This kind of news has a chilling effect on the majority of Zimbabweans local or in the diaspora, for its says only one message, that is more suffering and an increasingly uncertain and dark and darker future. This brings back the question of what these talks are really about. Despite my misgivings about the leadership of South Africa in this process, I agree with Kgalema Motlanthe that we cannot afford to go on talking and talking and that these talks should focus on simply saving the lives of the people of Zimbabwe first and everything else later. No one is fooled that the MDC received a raw deal from Mugabe and SADC. The questions that remains to be answered is what options the MDC has, what can the MDC do to overcome the support that SADC openly shows for Mugabe. My view is that the MDC right now has no choice but to join the unity government with its headlights on beam. The MDC now needs to go above ZANU PF both morally and in political strategy and define itself as a party of the future. I argue that the MDC now need to join the goverament and simply help lives and restore some sort of dignity and normalcy to the lives of Zimbabweans.

The MDC at the moment needs to go into the unity governments to salvage the little of what is left of Zimbabwe, as well as work on a new constitution that reverses the damage of the past eight years as well set a future course guaranteeing our rights as well independent institutions for elections and other pressing issues. This agenda does not need the MDC to have Ambassadorial post among other issues. The MDC need to look at its role in the unity government as transitional and not permanent. There is no way this process, flawed as it is, can be seen as the ultimate solution to the crisis in Zimbabwe but a process towards a final resolution addressing issues of free and fair elections at some point. The transition in Zimbabwe, the MDC should note, will be slow and painful but the journey has to be taken nevertheless. For Christians the death of Christ on the cross was a painful journey that had to be taken, but was certainly not the end of the process but simply part of it and the final victory is coming. The MDC need to make full and effective utilisation of the social service and economic ministries it holds to stabilise Zimbabwe, gain experience in running a government and prepare for the future. Joining the unity government, however painful, gives the opposition a chance to carry out its political programmes in peace. One thing is clear about ZANU PF and Robert Mugabe. Not only is he 84 years old and therefore half way into being an ancestor and spirit medium for his family and party, but Mugabe is and should not be seen as part of the future of Zimbabwe. He unfortunately bestrides the door of transition and a way has to be found to sidestep him and move forward. The success of the MDC in the unity government is depended on what the party will do with that little power and an acknowledgment that the unity governments is part of and not the transition. The MDC still need a robust political programme that guarantees its continued linkages with its grassroots support both urban and rural.

A key stumbling block that the MDC needs to overcome is the pessimism that come from western capitals. This pessimism is rooted in the understandable loathing of Robert Mugabe. The MDC is however better counselled by history, that sometimes what maters in the life of any given state are its interests. Mugabe did not mutate into a dictator overnight. He was one in 1980 and did commit heinous acts against the Ndebele community in the 1980s. Then there was no talk of Mugabe quitting. The likes of Tiny Rowland even threatened to fire editors of their newspapers in London who reported the atrocities in Matabeleland. Any given state is better protected by its people, healthy and without disease and hunger. Mugabe has weakened Zimbabwe and our abilities to move forward as a people, the MDC cannot afford to maintain this path by going for broke. The call by some media organisations that the MDC should not join the unity government negates the suffering that the people of Zimbabwe are going through. Another aspect that the MDC needs to remove from its psyche is that the unity agreement as process will not succeed without monetary support from the west. That in my view is neither true nor a sustainable proposition noting how the west is now burdened with its own economic challenges. The future of Zimbabwe lies not in generous aid but normalising the economy, resuscitating agriculture, education health, and more importantly taming corruption. History and present international crises must counsel the MDC that the world is far less concerned about Zimbabwe in comparison, say to Gaza. The geo-political significance of Zimbabwe is such that we can all die and the world moves on as if nothing happened. One million people died in Rwanda and the world moved on. Less that two thousand died in Gaza and the world almost came to standstill from the UN, Washington, London, Johannesburg, Lusaka to Paris. African governments, all quite on Zimbabwe, had something to say about the deaths of the Palestinians. Over 3000 have died in Zimbabwe and not many, except Raila Odinga and Botswana, said anything. That is the painful reality of our own world. It is good to then evaluate how far we can rely on outside to help to get us out of the malaise that ZANU PF has thrown us in. Diplomacy then is best placed to serve us and move us forward. The future belongs to us not Mugabe. //End//

7 comments:

  1. I am sorry Sir, I do not agree with you on MDC-T not having any choice but to join the unity government. Firstly let me say there is no unity government as far as Mugabe is concerned. What was so hard for SADC to tell Mugabe to release all MDC-T persons who were kidnapped by the Mugabe cronies? What was so hard for the SADC to tell Mugabe that he is wrong in breaching the MOU, (A) by continue to use hate language (B) Continue to torture and remove people from their homes without panties in a night dress and make them to go on a long drive with male Mugabe cronies holding them? Let me remind you of one thing Sir. MDC-T has one choice, ie. NOT TO JOIN THE FALACY UNITY GOVERNMENT. History will judge MDC-T right in few months to come. Mugabe must be removed from power, he stole the election from MDC-T. Everyone knows that in those 30days before the results were out Mugabe cooked the numbers. Therefore, Mugabe can continue to rule and torture people until the military kill him or do something. Wait and see what is going to happen in the next few months. All is not well in Mugabe's camp.

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  2. I tend to agree with the author of the above comments. Mr. Mukundu, like nearly all of the SADC leaders you tend to completely overlook one critical factor in your analysis and that is Mugabe's refusal to recognize the outcome of the last elections and his obstinate refusal to hand over power to the legitimate leader and his party. For the past 8 years, Mugabe has repeatedly demonstrated with such clarity his total contempt of opposition by beating, torturing, raping, abducting and even murdering thousands of activists and he has also demonstrated equally clearly his ability to completely disregard any laws, regulations or previous agreements that conflict with his agenda. So given this horrific background why on earth should anyone now entertain the thought of entering into any such power sharing agreement with people who have a long history of very evil and treacherous deceipt?
    This whole SADC proposal just has to be the biggest con ever - and everyone knows full well that it is a trap designed to dilute the power and influence of the MDC much the same as they did to Joshua Nkomo and what we are seeing happening to Raila Odinga in Kenya. Had Mugabe demonstrated even one single speck of sincerity or genuine committment to a genuine settlement it might have been a different story...but Mugabe's track record is clear. Mugabe intends to cling onto power fullstop, end of story! And SADC's complete failure to ever acknowledge or condemn the atrocities committed by the Mugabe regime places the mediators in the same boat as Mugabe - it is clear where their loyalties lie and it is a total disgrace to the people of this continent the way they have acted and behaved with their mediation process.

    Get real Mr.Mukundu. Everyone wants a settlement and and end to gross suffering and injustices but you know as well as anyone else that it can never happened with Mugabe still at the helm. People want change and are saying "YES WE CAN."

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  3. Ah, I see the propaganda is working in other countries: "Yes We Can".... Keep in mind, We The People of every color of each nation "Can"....governments "can not" and should be put in their place, as employees of the people. We have a world economic problem and Obamanation does not have the answers. As in Zimbabwe, as in all countries, the answers are within the people, not more rule of tryants, imo. Compromise does not tend to lead people forward, stagnation and more of the same continues.

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  4. Looks like President Obama means business. I hear Charles Taylor keeps asking Hague officials when Bob is going to be arriving as he is getting lonely.


    President Obama leads US drive to topple Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article5600659.ece

    President Obama wants a fresh approach to toppling Robert Mugabe and is discussing with aides an unprecedented, US-led diplomatic push to get tough new UN sanctions imposed against the Zimbabwe regime, The Times has learned.

    During talks Mr Obama has had with his top Africa advisers in recent weeks, the central idea they focused on was taking the issue of Zimbabwe before the UN Security Council, but for the first time to combine such a move with an intense diplomatic effort to persuade Russia and China not to block the initiative........

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  5. I agree with you Rashweat that it is time for the MDC to join for the greater good. Those who say let the struggle continue while Zimbabweans suffer have other options of survival or they are in the diaspora and therefore not feeling the pain. People are suffering and dying en masse and someone has to take responsibility and stop this suffering. I hear people saying Mugabe stole elections, Mugabe refused to yield more power yes in an ideal situation that is what we would all ask for but this is Mugabe that we are talking about.

    We need to come up with new startegies to remove him as sanctions and other strategies have failed. The MDC is informed by history on how Nkomo got swallowed and therefore should not fall prey to that. They have to startegise around their survival in this arrangement to ensure that they survive. The truth is those that are saying Tsvangirai should not join the GNU wanted a total transfer of power from Mugabe to Tsvangirai through negotiaations and that can never be achieved looking at the fact that Mugabe killied, raped, maimed and remained in power by stealth. This I believe is one way of taking the struggle forward instead of going into political oblivion by having Tsvangirai operating from exile for instance. Well said! Good analysis.

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  6. MDC T must never join ZANU PF for they are treacherous bunch. In any struggle for freedom there are always casualties so why give up now ? Those who have died will have died in vain. I personally want justice for what Mugabe did in Matabeleland and will that happen if Tsvangirai joins them ? certainly not to me a staunch supporter of the MDC it will be the greatest betrayal. We want justice criminals must face the full wrath of the law without impartiality because some are in Government.

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  7. Dear Mr. Mukundu, sending MDC into this "government" and expect that it will turn anything for the better is like sending some people naked and with empty hands into a fully ablazed factory and expect they will put out the fire. Not orderly equipped they will rather be burnt und die. But Zimbabwe needs the democratic leaders for the future, they should not be wasted for that futile experiment.

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