ONE GIANT STEP FOR ZANU PF…MULTIPLE STEPS BACKWARDS
FOR DEMOCRATISATION AND DEMOCRATIC ACTORS
There is general consensus that the last election held in Zimbabwe on
July 31 was irretrievably manipulated, and that the result cannot be said to be
truly reflective of the will of the people. The question that a lot of us are
failing to answer is how? This failure to clearly articulate how is not unique
to Zimbabweans alone, and any expectation for them to explain immediately and
provide incontrovertible evidence of how the theft occurred, while
understandable is a bit unfair, especially at this early stage.
This is normal in any theft, even petty theft, let alone a heist of the
nature that has just occurred in Zimbabwe. Robberies take place and people
invest in deep and detailed process that includes all manner of things, from
hunches to collection of physical, gathering witnesses and forensic evidence.
Some times the hunches are correct, but without physical evidence, or witnesses
to corroborate, those who commit the crimes often go scot-free at least for a
while. I know that this analogy is fairly simplistic, and maybe seen as just an
excuse, but it is not. If at this stage the people of Zimbabwe where in
possession of clear answers a few days after the full announcement of results, it
would be possible that they had these facts prior to the election, which would
have naturally suggested that they could have stopped it.
So bar the elaborate political analysis around this and that, bar the
“insightful” exposes on ZANU PF’s amazing organizing and organizational
strengths and perceptions of MDC’s ignorance, arrogance and poor organizational
and organization skills. The truth is no one except those that carried out this
electoral robbery know exactly what happened, and I am certain that they will
not be volunteering evidence or delivering a confession any time soon.
Where does this then leave us? It leaves us in a very bad place, where
we accept that we were robbed, and accept that the import of the robbery is a
step forward for the robbers and many steps back for the victims of the crime.
ZANU PF has achieved its goal of reclaiming the state, in the process, those
who do not really care for the truth or indeed the supremacy of the peoples
will, will congratulate them. They have also in the same breath, carried out
this crime in such a manner that instead of all faculties being invested in
trying to understand how they did it, and try to arrest them or make them
account for this daring crime, the opposition movement is busy finding fault
with itself and each other, which basically means that they will learn nothing
from this encounter and are likely to emerge weaker with a high probability of
falling victim to a similar trick in the future.
A lot of us are left to ponder the future under 5 more years of an unrepentant
ZANU PF regime, and what this means for our lives, our country and our future.
There are already dooms day scenarios that are being cast around the
collapse of the economy and break down of the nation. These may well come to
pass but at the moment they are just wishful thinking, based on the hope that
nature will create opportunities that man has failed to create for him/herself.
These scenarios are predicated on a notion that ZANU PF has not learnt anything
and will revert back to 2007 and behave as if everything that happened in the
intervening 7 years did not happen.
While I see, it presents me with a moral dilemma, out of a love for my country,
which tempts me to wish ZANU PF well. I am trying to make myself believe that
any organization capable of carrying out such a daring robbery will be careful
with how it uses the proceeds of the heist. I want to believe that It will
learn from its past, and try to make sure that it doesn’t recreate the
circumstances that nearly got it caught out in the past. So in spite of history
and what I know to be likely, I want to expect greater care from ZANU PF over
the 5 years they have been given by hook and crook. But this would represent
some form of historical absolution, which is divorced from reality. The reality
is that ZANU PF governs poorly, is corrupt and believes that ZANU Pf is the
country and the country is ZANU PF. So if they take care of themselves, the
rest of us do not matter. They will falter, squander and take us back to the
past we are running away from politically, economically and socially.
Add to the foregoing, the reality that the robbery of the 31st
of July will no doubt dint ay thoughts and ideas of effecting some change
through democratic means, as espoused through the ballot. The vote has lost a
significant amount of appeal for many Zimbabweans who believe they had gone to
the polls to choose who governs them. The election rather than prove ZANU PF’s
supremacy and popularity, has just proved to most Zimbabweans that voting
counts for nothing. It has proved what urban legend often credits to Russian
Leader Stalin, that on voting he remarked
You know, comrades, I consider it completely unimportant
who in the party will vote, or how; but what is extraordinarily important is
this — who will count the votes, and how.
Back home, it has proved what Webster Shamu repeated in the run up to
the election that you cannot take through the pen what ZANU PF won through the
barrel of the gun.
And therein lies our deepest tragedy.
While ZANU PF has made a giant leap forward in terms of the capture and
retention of the state, they have done so through closing out any legitimate,
peaceful and democratic way of making them account as a political authority.
They have closed out the one avenue that would have guaranteed a peaceful way
in which accountability at the state level can take place. I am certain that
this is done in the false belief that Zimbabweans are a risk averse people and
will not do anything dramatic or illegal. If this were really true, we
would have lasted longer under the colonial regime.
By destroying faith in the vote, ZANU PF has set itself up to be
resisted in ways that even it has not encountered before. IT forces people
seeking change in Zimbabwe to begin to think outside the electoral box, because
it is clear that it won’t deliver. It is true that Zimbabwe is not Egypt
and that it is unlikely that Egypt style protests will erupt in the aftermath
of this electoral theft. But it is also true that when the people of Egypt
found the electoral route to regime change closed they found alternatives on
the street. Let us not forget that that last election that Hosni Mubarak held
in 2005, he emerged with a majority and electoral mandate (88.5%) more crashing
that Mugabe’s 61%. Up until February of 2011 (an Election year according
to the electoral calendar), the Egyptians had not been known for their
uprisings. Mubarak had ruled for 30 years. In neighboring Tunisia, which set
off the Arab spring, they had been under Ben Ali’s rule for 23 years.
So the reality of the matter is that the analysis that is true today may
not hold true tomorrow. Besides it is not political crisis through theft of
elections that sets people against the rulers. It is social and economic
degradation, poor living standards, high unemployment, failure to put food on
the table and blurred future that does that. ZANU PF with its newly found 2
thirds majority in parliament and exclusive province over the executive would
be advised to steer away from the conditions mentioned above, lest they want to
find themselves shocked by a population that knows it cant vote them out, but
has to get rid of them somehow and at any cost.
In the final analysis, it is clear, at least to me, that a people who
have set themselves up as a peaceful movement bent on peaceful and
constitutional ways of engaging with what has already been qualified as
dictatorship, are at this point in time having their faith shaken. One hopes
that they continue to believe. I know I will, because of a simplistic belief
that you do not fight a monster by becoming another monster, that evil is
fought with good, and silver bullets, holy water and a silver cross kill
vampires not other blood sucking creatures. It is simplistic, but it is my
belief and what guides me in my struggle.
My fear is that while my faith has been shaken but remains there in
terms of the above, I don’t think that many of my fellow citizens are that
resolved, and I do not have the tools beyond a moral argument, nor the energy
to convince them that this is the right path.
So let ZANU PF celebrate the giant step that they have made, and the
push back on democratization and democratic forces that they have achieved, but
let them be warned that if they do not use their stolen mandate wisely, it
maybe the simplest things, something less sophisticated than politics that will
put them on their deathbed.
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