Opinion / Blogs
Naivety to cost MDC-T dearly!
21 Mar 2013 at 23:22hrs | Views
THE Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) formation led by Prime Minister (PM) Morgan Tsvangirai appears dumbfounded at the realisation that ZANU-PF has not changed a bit despite the four years they have been cosying up to each other in the moribund inclusive government.
After sharing teas and finger food together in Cabinet, the Council of Ministers, Parliament, the Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee, the Organ on National Healing, Reconciliation and Integration and some such forums, the MDC-T thought their rivals had abandoned their heavy hand tactics for fair play not knowing that for President Robert Mugabe's party familiarity breeds contempt.
At this eleventh hour, ZANU-PF is once again revealing its true colours – true to the idiom that a leopard does not change its spots.
The ZANU-PF election machinery has been set in motion and, true to our predictions violence has flared up once more as the party's agents provocateurs hunt down their rivals.
Poor MDC-T is only realising the lack of sincerity on the part of ZANU-PF when it has become doubly difficult for it to disentangle itself from the electoral processes that it has signed up to without discrediting itself.
In the next few months, the nation would be headed for polls to retire the unity government with all indications pointing to a repeat of the sham 2008 elections that gave rise to this triumvirate.
There is really nothing on the ground to suggest that the country would for once stage free and fair elections whose outcome would be regarded as legitimate.
The only thing that has changed since the MDC-T joined the coalition in 1999 is that the party has totally discredited itself so much such that its ratings have tumbled as evidenced by the results of recent opinion polls by Afrobarometer, Zimbabwe Vigil, Freedom House and the Mass Public Opinion Institute.
The MDC-T has found itself failing where it mattered most: It has failed to push for the change that it has been promising an expectant populace since its formation in 1999. Its former allies, including the National Constitutional Assembly and the Commercial Farmers Union, are crying foul; they argue that the MDC-T has lost its cause. We tend to agree.
While the party has found a convenient scapegoat in ZANU-PF, blaming its rivals for frustrating reforms agreed to under the Global Political Agreement (GPA) and sabotaging its Government Work Programme, nothing could be further from the truth. The party has simply proved to be out of its depths ' it has lacked the skills, depth and stamina required at that level.
MDC-T officials have easily fallen for the trappings of power, very few of them have been able to translate their newly-found bling into something that could change the lives of the ordinary citizens wallowing in poverty.
To a lot of people, nothing distinguishes the MDC-T from ZANU-PF anymore ' both political parties have deviated from their founding principles.
The past four years have also seen MDC-T officials joining the gravy train ' abusing their positions in order to enrich themselves. Even at the very top, the party's leadership has struggled to prove its worth. Take for instance the premier who, apart from marrying a young beautiful wife and acquiring a luxurious mansion in the leafy suburb of Highlands has been known more for controversy than delivering on issues that really matter to the electorate.
During the sustenance of the unity government, it can be argued that poverty has actually worsened as a result of the catastrophic closure of companies, the infighting in the coalition and the collapse in disposable incomes.
What the MDC-T claims to be among its achievements in the inclusive government, the new constitution, merely entrenches the status quo. It has left intact the President's overbearing influence in the operations of the State despite the deafening calls for the dilution of excessive executive powers.
It is shocking that the MDC-T leader now sees nothing wrong with an all too powerful presidency. But like a sheep being taken for slaughter, the MDC-T will go into the elections on the same terms and conditions as happened in 2008: Nothing really has changed on the ground.
The arrest of its officials over what many people see as trumped-up charges should come as a rude awakening for the MDC-T. The tempo is being upped in terms of the intimidation and harassment of MDC-T officials, the private media, non-governmental organisations and human rights lawyers ahead of the elections to prepare the ground for "a resounding ZANU-PF victory."
As is usually the case, the police have been quick to arrest perceived MDC-T offenders but turning a blind eye to perpetrators from ZANU-PF. The State-owned broadcast and print media are also throwing punches at ZANU-PF's rivals.
Once again, PM Tsvangirai and his party have been led down the garden path. They have been made to supervise electoral processes and giving legitimacy to an exercise they absolutely have no control over.
While the premier has become the face of the electoral processes in Zimbabwe, the political environment has remained tilted in ZANU-PF's favour. The MDC-T, as we have pointed out before, has got itself to blame for it. The party has not used its time in the inclusive government to lobby for meaningful reforms capable of producing a credible electoral outcome.
It should not come as a surprise to the MDC-T that police are behaving in this manner because their leadership has long pledged its loyalty to ZANU-PF and has taken to mobilising support for their favourite party and removing any impediments along the way that could scuttle a ZANU-PF victory. In fact, all security apparatus have proven beyond any shred of doubt that they are under ZANU-PF's wings. Under the circumstances, the MDC-T should have done a lot more to press for reforms. After all the GPA had envisaged a situation whereby the army, intelligence service and police would conduct themselves in a professional and ethical manner. The GPA was also desirous to see Zimbabweans enjoying unrestrained democratic rights among them freedom of speech, freedom of association and assembly.
But with a few months to go before the unity government comes to its logical conclusion, the MDC-T is still behaving as if it was operating outside government whose mandate was to implement the GPA.
The MDC-T should have seen this coming. It should have emphatically and unequivocally pushed its position regarding the need for reforms before the referendum and the main elections to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) who are the arbiters in the Zimbabwe crisis.
Doing so now, a few months before the expiry of this transitional arrangement, would be of no help as SADC and the AU would simply dismiss the MDC-T as cry-babies fearful of elections.
After sharing teas and finger food together in Cabinet, the Council of Ministers, Parliament, the Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee, the Organ on National Healing, Reconciliation and Integration and some such forums, the MDC-T thought their rivals had abandoned their heavy hand tactics for fair play not knowing that for President Robert Mugabe's party familiarity breeds contempt.
At this eleventh hour, ZANU-PF is once again revealing its true colours – true to the idiom that a leopard does not change its spots.
The ZANU-PF election machinery has been set in motion and, true to our predictions violence has flared up once more as the party's agents provocateurs hunt down their rivals.
Poor MDC-T is only realising the lack of sincerity on the part of ZANU-PF when it has become doubly difficult for it to disentangle itself from the electoral processes that it has signed up to without discrediting itself.
In the next few months, the nation would be headed for polls to retire the unity government with all indications pointing to a repeat of the sham 2008 elections that gave rise to this triumvirate.
There is really nothing on the ground to suggest that the country would for once stage free and fair elections whose outcome would be regarded as legitimate.
The only thing that has changed since the MDC-T joined the coalition in 1999 is that the party has totally discredited itself so much such that its ratings have tumbled as evidenced by the results of recent opinion polls by Afrobarometer, Zimbabwe Vigil, Freedom House and the Mass Public Opinion Institute.
The MDC-T has found itself failing where it mattered most: It has failed to push for the change that it has been promising an expectant populace since its formation in 1999. Its former allies, including the National Constitutional Assembly and the Commercial Farmers Union, are crying foul; they argue that the MDC-T has lost its cause. We tend to agree.
While the party has found a convenient scapegoat in ZANU-PF, blaming its rivals for frustrating reforms agreed to under the Global Political Agreement (GPA) and sabotaging its Government Work Programme, nothing could be further from the truth. The party has simply proved to be out of its depths ' it has lacked the skills, depth and stamina required at that level.
MDC-T officials have easily fallen for the trappings of power, very few of them have been able to translate their newly-found bling into something that could change the lives of the ordinary citizens wallowing in poverty.
To a lot of people, nothing distinguishes the MDC-T from ZANU-PF anymore ' both political parties have deviated from their founding principles.
The past four years have also seen MDC-T officials joining the gravy train ' abusing their positions in order to enrich themselves. Even at the very top, the party's leadership has struggled to prove its worth. Take for instance the premier who, apart from marrying a young beautiful wife and acquiring a luxurious mansion in the leafy suburb of Highlands has been known more for controversy than delivering on issues that really matter to the electorate.
During the sustenance of the unity government, it can be argued that poverty has actually worsened as a result of the catastrophic closure of companies, the infighting in the coalition and the collapse in disposable incomes.
What the MDC-T claims to be among its achievements in the inclusive government, the new constitution, merely entrenches the status quo. It has left intact the President's overbearing influence in the operations of the State despite the deafening calls for the dilution of excessive executive powers.
It is shocking that the MDC-T leader now sees nothing wrong with an all too powerful presidency. But like a sheep being taken for slaughter, the MDC-T will go into the elections on the same terms and conditions as happened in 2008: Nothing really has changed on the ground.
The arrest of its officials over what many people see as trumped-up charges should come as a rude awakening for the MDC-T. The tempo is being upped in terms of the intimidation and harassment of MDC-T officials, the private media, non-governmental organisations and human rights lawyers ahead of the elections to prepare the ground for "a resounding ZANU-PF victory."
As is usually the case, the police have been quick to arrest perceived MDC-T offenders but turning a blind eye to perpetrators from ZANU-PF. The State-owned broadcast and print media are also throwing punches at ZANU-PF's rivals.
Once again, PM Tsvangirai and his party have been led down the garden path. They have been made to supervise electoral processes and giving legitimacy to an exercise they absolutely have no control over.
While the premier has become the face of the electoral processes in Zimbabwe, the political environment has remained tilted in ZANU-PF's favour. The MDC-T, as we have pointed out before, has got itself to blame for it. The party has not used its time in the inclusive government to lobby for meaningful reforms capable of producing a credible electoral outcome.
It should not come as a surprise to the MDC-T that police are behaving in this manner because their leadership has long pledged its loyalty to ZANU-PF and has taken to mobilising support for their favourite party and removing any impediments along the way that could scuttle a ZANU-PF victory. In fact, all security apparatus have proven beyond any shred of doubt that they are under ZANU-PF's wings. Under the circumstances, the MDC-T should have done a lot more to press for reforms. After all the GPA had envisaged a situation whereby the army, intelligence service and police would conduct themselves in a professional and ethical manner. The GPA was also desirous to see Zimbabweans enjoying unrestrained democratic rights among them freedom of speech, freedom of association and assembly.
But with a few months to go before the unity government comes to its logical conclusion, the MDC-T is still behaving as if it was operating outside government whose mandate was to implement the GPA.
The MDC-T should have seen this coming. It should have emphatically and unequivocally pushed its position regarding the need for reforms before the referendum and the main elections to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) who are the arbiters in the Zimbabwe crisis.
Doing so now, a few months before the expiry of this transitional arrangement, would be of no help as SADC and the AU would simply dismiss the MDC-T as cry-babies fearful of elections.
Source - FinGaz
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