Zimbabwe’s 18 opposition parties under the National Electoral Reform
Agenda (NERA) umbrella are planning to hold more street protests this coming
Saturday, 17 September 2016. The opposition parties are now using street
protests as a substitute for implementing democratic reforms. An ill-advised
substitute and a very dangerous one at that!
“We are going ahead with or without their blessing or permission. We have
the law in our favour and we are not going to negotiate the law with Mr
Mugabe,” said MDC-T Secretary General, Douglas Mwonzora.
“This Saturday we are organising 210 demonstrations throughout the
country to force the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to accept reforms,” said Jacob
Ngarivhuma, the leader of Transform Zimbabwe, one of the opposition parties in
the NERA grouping.
“We are going to continue fighting. This is the language they
understand.”
Whilst Mr Mwonzora is right that the opposition parties have a
constitutional right to hold peaceful demonstrations we all know, however, that
the street protests will NOT be peaceful. The very fact that the regime has
already banned the demos means the authorities will be going out, armed to the
teeth, determined to stop the demos. Meanwhile the protesters will be going out
itching for a fight.
So strictly speaking, Mr Ngarivhuma, violent confrontation is the
language both the Zanu PF regime and opposition parties speak and understand.
President Mugabe has often boasted of holding “several degrees in violence”.
For their part, the opposition parties have failed to explain what reforms they
wanted implemented in any of the accepted languages be it English, Shona,
Ndebele or whatever and are therefore resorting to the language of violent
street protests!
Since the rigged July 2013 elections, MDC-T has been calling for
electoral reforms in which all the country’s existing laws are “realigned” to
bring them in line with Zimbabwe’s 2013 new constitution. Veritas, a local
Zimbabwean group of experts on legal matter, has carried out a thorough
analysis and concluded that even with the best political will in the world the
realignment alone will not be enough to deliver free, fair and credible
elections.
The trouble is with the new constitution itself, it is too weak and
feeble to deliver free and fair elections. This is not surprising given the
constitution was a product of the “horse trading” between Zanu PF and MDC, as
Trevor Ncube rightly pointed out.
For the country to have free, fair and credible elections we need to
implement far reaching structural reforms such allowing parliament to have
meaningful oversight on the appointing and firing of ZEC officials to ensure
the body’s independence, for example.
The continued call by opposition leaders for “ZEC to accept reforms” is
proof these people really have no clue what the democratic reforms are about,
the process of getting the reforms implemented, etc. In 2015 Douglas Mwonzora
assured the nation that MDC-T will have forced Zanu PF “kicking and screaming”
to implement all electoral reforms by the end of that year. Yet here we are,
nearly two years later, and still not even one meaningful reform has been
implemented of course.
Meanwhile Zanu PF has already been implementing its own meaningless
reforms and making a big song and dance about it. VP Mnangagwa, who is also the
Minister of Justice and Parliamentary Affairs, has already had an amendment
bill designed to bring most of the country’s laws into line with the new
constitution passed into law. As far as know, MDC-T, the only opposition party
with MPs and senators, did not submit any counter proposals to the bill. A very
familiar story with MDC; the party did not submit not even one democratic
reform proposal in parliament throughout the five years of the GNU and yet that
was supposed to be their principal task.
Ever since parliament passed the law aligning all existing laws to the
new constitution the pressure has shifted to MDC-T and their NERA friend to not
just ask for electoral reforms but to spell out the chapter and verse of the
law and even say word for word they want changed. This is clearly something
MDC-T and its NERA friends are not prepared to do and by shifting emphasis from
reforms to street protests they are hoping no one will ever ask them about
reforms!
So instead of fighting for free and fair elections in parliament by
submitting alternative amendments to ensure the existing laws are properly
aligned to the new constitution or in the Constitutional Court by submitting
legal challenge for failure deliver this key individual right to free and
meaningful vote; MDC-T want to fight for free and fair elections in the
streets!
It is all very well for the party leaders like Mwonzora, Tsvangirai and
Biti to take the fighting into the street, they will be will be calling on
their supporters to fight back, if attached by either Zanu PF thugs or the
Police. The leaders always drive back to their secure homes in the low density
suburbs or sometimes even hide for a few weeks in the Netherland Embassy, as
Tsvangirai once did, if the situation gets too hot. The ordinary people are not
so lucky; it is them who will be fighting the running battles with the Riot
Police and who will be visited by Zanu PF thugs in the dead of night!
It is a historic fact that if MDC leaders had not sold-out during the GNU
and implemented all the democratic reforms; Zimbabwe would have had free, fair
and credible elections in July 2013 and we would be well on our way to
rebuilding the nation and not still tuck in this economic and political
hell-hole.
It is a historic fact too that if any of our opposition leaders had
learnt anything from Tsvangirai and his fellow MDC leaders’ blundering
incompetence during the GNU then none of them would have wasted the nation’s
time calling for the wishy-washy NERA. They would not be seeking a violent confrontation
with Zanu PF knowing what the regime did in 2008!
Zanu PF is already under a lot of pressure from the worsening economic
situation to accept meaningful political change. President Mugabe would have
been forced to accept change if he was presented with a well thought-out list
of democratic reforms. As long as no meaningful reforms are implemented, no
reforms will ever be implemented by street protests, Zanu PF will have the
chance to rig the vote and stay in power.
If we want to have free, fair and credible elections then we must
implement the democratic reforms. We must not allow ourselves to be misled by
those who have failed to implement even one reform even when they had the
golden opportunity to do so during the GNU into believing street protests are a
substitute to reforms.
“Chegutu West MP, Dexter Nduna, is set to lose his Badon Farm along Chakari Road in Chegutu after Standard Chartered Bank filed an application for a sequestration order in a bid to recover a $231 171 loan the Zanu PF legislator is allegedly failing to repay,” reported the Newsday.
ReplyDeleteWas it Zimbabwe's greatest political turn-coat, Professor Jonathan Moyo who said life was tough outside Zanu PF, he was right of course and was rubbing it in for the ordinary Zimbabwe whom the regime has always treated as second class citizen and outsiders. Mai Mujuru and her ZimPF friends who were booted out of Zanu PF in 2014 have already found out that life is indeed tough outside the dictatorship as many are already suffering from stress and some have died, according to the Zim PF leader.
Now it is clear that not even those still counting themselves as members of Zanu PF's inner circle are feeling the ill effects of the worsen economic meltdown. MP Nduna, we the long suffering masses welcome you to the real Zimbabwe of poverty, hopelessness and despair! You played you part in creating this corrupt and tyrannical dictatorship without a care of the suffering it brought to others because you thought the system will look after you and yours from the cradle to the grave. Well that did not happen and if anyone deserve to suffer it is selfish thugs like you, Nduna.
The economic meltdown is the silent, invisible and yet most deadly force that Zanu PF can neither bribe nor kill. It is the economic meltdown that is forcing the people to go out on the street and demand change. In the end Zanu PF will accept regime change and it will be the economy that would have forced it to finally swallow this bitter pill!
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