If MDC had listened, first, to the repeated
appeals for the party to implement the democratic reforms during the GNU and
then to the warnings not to take party in the elections without first
implementing the reforms; then the country would not be in this mess.
It is disappointing that MDC leaders are still not listening to anyone.
“To resolve the challenges arresting Zimbabwe, the MDC continues to
propose dialogue anchored on the following five key areas,” said Nelson Chamisa
is a recent press statement.
a. The return to legitimacy, demilitarization and agreement on a roadmap to such a change
a. The return to legitimacy, demilitarization and agreement on a roadmap to such a change
b. Agreement on a comprehensive reform platform and agenda.”
Let us just focus on above items. The issue of political legitimacy is at
the very heart and soul of Zimbabwe economic mess and political paralysis and
it is therefore important that are all clear what it means. The other two key
issues of dialogue and reform will only make sense when we have defined
political legitimacy.
The UN Universal
Declaration of Human Rights Article 21 states.
(1) Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his
country, directly or through freely chosen representatives.
(2) Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country.
(3) The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures.
(2) Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country.
(3) The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures.
In other words the people’s democratic will expressed through free, fair
and credible elections is the only basis of political legitimacy or the
authority of government.
Last July’s Zimbabwe elections cannot be judged to have been free, fair
and credible for many reasons including:
1) 3
million or so Zimbabweans in the diaspora were denied the opportunity to
register and then to vote. During his visit to attend the UN GA last September,
President Mnangagwa assured everyone Zimbabweans in the diaspora will be
allowed to vote next time, proof this could have been done if the government
had so wished.
2) Zanu PF
operatives and traditional leaders used state resources such as food aid and
agricultural inputs and abused their power to coerce voters, especially rural
voters who constitute 60% plus of the potential voters, to attend and then to
vote for Zanu PF.
3) ZEC
failed to release a verified voters’ roll and to release the summary of vote
cast, V11 forms, although these are legal requirement. It was impossible to
verify and trace both ZEC’s official results and MDC’s own results.
4) Zanu PF had the monopoly use of the country
public print and electronic media with the opposition getting very little
coverage, if any at all.
For these reason and many others,
all election observer teams from nations with any democratic credentials
condemned the elections. “The final results as announced by the Electoral
Commission contained numerous errors and lacked adequate traceability,
transparency and verifiability,” stated the EU Zimbabwe Observer Mission final
report.
“Finally, the restrictions on political freedoms, the excessive use of
force by security forces and abuses of human rights in the post-election period
undermined the corresponding positive aspects during the pre-election campaign.
As such, many aspects of the 2018 elections in Zimbabwe failed to meet
international standards.”
MDC has official accepted the
results of the parliamentary and senatorial elections as valid and has rejected
the presidential results on the basis that the ZEC result was wrong. This is
wrong! Both the parliamentary and presidential races were equally affected by
the flaws and illegalities noted above and therefore the results of both races
are equally meaningless and void.
Both Mnangagwa and his Zanu PF junta friends do not have the people’s
mandate in the form of majority votes in a free, fair and credible elections
and the regime, not just Mnangagwa, is illegitimate.
Since it was Zanu PF, as the government of the day tasked to organise
the July 2018 elections, that failed to carry out this sacred task and not for
the first time – has done this these last 38 years -; it naïve, to say the
least, to ask the party to discuss what to do next. Zanu PF is illegitimate and
one does not ask the thief to seat in judgement of his own case.
Just as last year’s electoral process was so flawed and illegal it
failed to produce al legal winner it also failed to produce a legal opposition.
The suggestion that MDC leaders can be involved in deciding the comprehensive
reforms the country need to implement to ensure next elections are free, fair
and credible is laughable because the same leaders failed to get even one
meaningful reform implemented during the last GNU.
For Zimbabwe to move on, both Zanu PF and MDC must step down, neither of
the two have any mandate to govern, to create the political space required for
the appointment of an interim administration. It is this administration that
will be tasked to implement the democratic reforms and entrusted to hold the
country’s first ever free, fair and credible.
The refusal by Zanu PF and MDC to step down should be seen
for what it is – they holding the nation hostage. There will not be any
meaningful economic recovery until there is meaningful political change and so,
in the end, both these two parties will be forced to go!
Last year's electoral process was full of flaws and illegalities both ZEC's results and MDC's own results did not make any sense and so no one can ever claim to be legitimate. So MDC's claim to "sort Mnangagwa's legitimacy" is nonsense because only the people can do that in a free and fair election.
ReplyDeleteFor Zimbabwe to move on, both Zanu PF and MDC must step down, neither of the two have any mandate to govern, to create the political space required for the appointment of an interim administration. It is this administration that will be tasked to implement the democratic reforms and entrusted to hold the country’s first ever free, fair and credible.
The refusal by Zanu PF and MDC to step down should be seen for what it is – they holding the nation hostage. There will not be any meaningful economic recovery until there is meaningful political change and so, in the end, both these two parties will be forced to go!
The extension of sanctions against the Mnangagwa regime came shortly after former US ambassador to Zimbabwe Bruce Wharton and ex-assistant secretary of State for African Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield, released a stinging paper alleging that Harare was now effectively under the grip of an unreformed military, which fronted the November 2017 coup.
ReplyDeleteZanu PF rigged last July’s elections and in the wanton violence of 1 st August 2018 and January this year the regime was beating the nation into submission. No one can ever say Zanu PF has abandoned its corrupt and tyrannical ways to justify lifting the sanctions. No one! The EU is re-engaging Zanu PF not because the party has changed but out of greed! We therefore must thank the Americans for their principled stand in demanding free and fair elections!