Riding the tiger in Zimbabwe – Eddie Cross

via Politicsweb – Riding the tiger in Zimbabwe Eddie Cross 07 May 2014

In Asia they have a saying that you must be careful when you try to ride a Tiger – if you fall off you may be eaten. In Zimbabwe the Tiger is the struggle for political power and this has been going on ever since MDC emerged to challenge the entrenched hold that Zanu PF has held since 1980.

Those holding power (riding the Tiger) know full well what they will face if they are to fall off. They came close to that in 2008 when they lost the March elections only to be rescued and put back on the Tiger by the actions of Mr. Mbeki, then President of South Africa. They know that if they were to lose power, they would face the wrath of the people accumulated over the past 34 years – the genocide of 1983/87, the harsh suppression of all opposition Parties between 1987 and 2005, the mass destruction of homes in 2005 and then the savage violence against their opponents through to today.

Those who have accumulated wealth on the back of those who hold power today – many as a result of illegal activities and the expropriation of private assets or simply access to State resources and opportunities, know full well how transient wealth is, they know what it is to be poor, they fear losing it all.

There are four centers of political power in Zimbabwe at present, the MDC led by Mr. Tsvangirai holds popular power; most observers hold the view that if we were to have a genuine election here, free of all the manipulation, violence and intimidation that have become the norm that he and the MDC would be returned to power. The recent upheavals in the MDC leadership are just so much froth on the surface of the sea, get down into the water and he still holds sway. Mr. Biti and Mr. Mangoma, like Mr. Ncube and his crew, are discovering that if they try to ride the MDC Tiger, they will be discarded and eaten. All that is left of the Ncube challenge to his leadership in 2005 are bones in the bush.

Then there is the centre controlled by the Mujuru faction in Zanu PF. This has control of the Parliamentary elements of the Party, the majority of the old timers brought back into Cabinet in August 2013 and many of the more progressive elements that make up the Party. In any Party activities this faction has clearly shown that they control a working majority in Zanu PF. But they are not popular, are regarded as being very largely responsible for the failure of the Party in government. Mr. Gono, former Governor of the Reserve Bank, is clearly in this grouping and is sometimes talked about as a possible future leader, but he has no credibility and without Mrs. Mujuru to hold his hand could not win a contest for leadership in the Party.

Mrs. Mujuru is the Vice President and given her entrenched position in the Party should be the clear favorite to win the race to succeed Mr. Mugabe as President. But she has stumbled badly in recent months, given responsibility for selecting the Cabinet after their victory in the July 2013 elections; she ignored the younger elements in the Party and brought back many who were not only corrupt but also incompetent. She has tried to defend many of her key supporters in the Civil Service and in the Executive who have been exposed for corruption and abuse of office and this has gone down in the country like a lead balloon. One well connected observer said to me two weeks ago – she is already half eaten by the Tiger and is now unlikely to make the grade.

The third centre of power is grouped about Mr. Mnangagwa, currently Minister of Justice, formerly Minister of Defence and before that, Security; known commonly as the Crocodile. As the head of the Joint Operations Command (the JOC), he virtually runs a parallel State in Zimbabwe and while the Marange bonanza was available, had at his disposal resources that challenged those of the Ministry of Finance.

More than any other, he was responsible for the ruthless and efficient exercise that the Military and Security elements carried out to support the re-election of Zanu PF in the July 2013 elections. He was not rewarded for his efforts and is very angry and bitter about that, a sense that his colleagues on the JOC share. This was one occasion when the “divide and rule” tactics of Mr. Mugabe may have boomeranged on him.

There is no doubt in my mind that the real power in Zimbabwe (as opposed to democratic power either in the country or the Party) rests with this group. They have the capacity to make things happen and act with speed when required. They control much of the State administration as well as the Military in all its different forms.

Then there is the fourth centre of power grouped around the “Old Man”, Mr. Mugabe. He is in the last years of his life and is often seen as being frail and ill. But his mind is clear and he is still the master at manipulation and control. In 2004, Mnangagwa and a large group of leaders in Zanu PF tried to force him into retirement in an operation that became known as the “Tsholotsho Plot” they were simply brushed aside by the crafty old fox. In 2005 when a group led by retired General Mujuru tried the same exercise, supported by the South African intelligence services, he again brushed the threat to his leadership aside.

Even now he is feared and respected and will not relinquish control. He has constitutional power as the ZBC and ZTV affirm a dozen times a day – he is “Commander in Chief”. I view the Zanu PF government as a collection of old guys in a broken down bus that has no diesel and poor tyres, with Mr. Mugabe at the wheel, asleep and unable to give effective control to the bus but denying anyone on the front seats behind him the right to take over. He wants to die at the wheel, with disastrous results for all those who are passengers.

Clearly the main play at present is not in the MDC where the centre of power is in fact pretty firm and beyond challenge. It is in Zanu PF where the three other national centers of power are competing for control of the steering wheel of this broken down bus that goes by the name of Zimbabwe. Time is not on their side as the economy (which cannot be rigged) is sliding towards a point where they will not be able to pull any more rabbits out of the hat and pay the Civil Service. Everything they have done since they resumed full control of the State has simply deepened the hole they are in.

They have to accept major changes in the way they are managing our affairs and to do so they are going to have to decide who can ride the Tiger. Believe me this Tiger will be a challenge to anyone – corruption is out of control and endemic; Zanu PF policies have failed and will not deliver growth and stability, just more collapse and poverty. The old guard, are simply incapable of making the changes that are necessary to put the Country back on its feet. Then there are all those who think they should have a crack at power in the Military, it’s no secret that the Commander of the Army uses a number plate on his Mercedes Benz that reads “ZIM 2”.

There are many in Zimbabwe today who have given up hope and who see no possibility of real change and development. However I see possibilities in the impending outcome of the struggles in Zanu PF and like the changes that followed the death of Mau in China and the subsequent changes to the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, this might just result in the emergence of new leadership that will turn things around. The new leadership must accept that if they do adopt the required reforms to our economic and political policies that far from being thrown off the Tiger, they will have found the secret of staying in their seat without coercion and control and the rewards could be equally great for all of us.

Eddie Cross is MDC MP for Bulawayo South. This article first appeared on his websitewww.eddiecross.africanherd.com  

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 20
  • comment-avatar
    John Thomas 10 years ago

    Lovely theories Ed. A read of some of your old columns predicating about developments shows that your crystal ball is very cloudy (maybe the gunja is strong down there in “sky’s”).

    Nobody knows how things are going to work out, that is for sure. What we have to worry about is the disintegration of the state. This is a real possibility. We have been moving in this direction for some time. Then there will be nobody to ride the tiger and we will all be potential tiger snacks.

  • comment-avatar
    Simply Simon 10 years ago

    John Thomas, the important thing is the maintenance of HOPE. Regardless of how high the crisis level is, Eddie always brings hope. Thank you Eddie for reminding us always that the sun rises in the Morning……..

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    roving ambassador. 10 years ago

    Eddie ,lets be proactive and make Zanu work for its sins, please advise all MPs to walk out and not come back until all out standing issues are resolved.
    Do not legitimatise Zanu by sitting in that parliament.
    Walk out and leave egg in Zanu’s face,

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    Mixed Race 10 years ago

    Well written article except that I do not agree with you Mr Cross when you blame Mr Mbeki for bailing out ZANU-PY. Your party negotiated all the conditions of the agreement which you failed to implement fully before holding the very very important election due to poor judgement by your leadership.

    • comment-avatar
      Parangeta 10 years ago

      Not true, the negotiations were agreed upon and would have
      been fruitful, BUT, as always, Mugarbage lied, manipulated and
      deceived, and the plan failed.

      Not MDC, but ZANU-PF scuttled the GNU all along, read the minutes!

    • comment-avatar
      Jack the rabbit 10 years ago

      Mixed race, you don’t like Cross do you?

  • comment-avatar
    munzwa 10 years ago

    Rov has it, i think the MPs are are not proactive enough, comfortable in their situation and not wanting to rock the boat, afraid of the tiger eh Eddie…

  • comment-avatar
    Africa Power 10 years ago

    Well done Mr Cross, soon change wil come true.

  • comment-avatar
    Jono Austin 10 years ago

    JT you’re right. Eddie is pie in the sky. His crystal ball IS murky. He said MDC would be governing and everything would be OK. I’m afraid ‘brand Eddie’ is not credible.

    • comment-avatar
      Parangeta 10 years ago

      Eddie Cross is totally credible, it was Nikuv’s
      puppet – Mugarbage that is not credible.

      eEvery point Eddir Cross mentions is on the mark,
      if Mnanagwa and his thieving b^&%sards had
      not paid $13 million to rig the Election!

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    Mlimo 10 years ago

    Eddie the eternal jump the fence politician when the wind blows this way he hangs the side away from the wind and when the wind blows the other way he sits the other side. Zimbabwe needs leaders who aren’t going to change side no matter what direction the wind blows. Smith was one of those. There are three million well educated and well informed and well able to resurrect Zimbabwe for all. Until zanupf goes you will never get these people back. Many are extremely well qualified to fix Zimbabwe some have the highest qualifications and experience in governance to do the job . These people can’t vote so its up to the people inside Zimbabwe to fix zanupf. Then make the right changes and we will all come back black white pink or purple, gay lesbian wacky and unique. We as former Rhodesians and Zimbabweans can do it its up to the people in zimbabwe to stand up now. If you think that everyone who left Zimbabwe didn’t leave for fun we left and paid the second highest sacrifice – giving up your beloved country. The only highest sacrifice is giving your life and there are many who died in vain for Mugabe and many who died for responsible government. Those left have supported Mugabe in pursuit of blatant wealth greed and gluttony at the cost too ordinary people. You who live in Zimbabwe who want to fix the country and make it what it should be the jewel of Africa now need to make the same sacrifice we who left made and that is get rid of zanupf.

    • comment-avatar
      Parangeta 10 years ago

      Mlimo – had Mugarbage followed the Constitution,
      and allowed the Diaspora to Vote, as required,
      he would be history and maybe in the Hague.

      It is not the diapora, the oveseas Zimbabweans that
      are to blame for this mess, it’s Mugarbage alone!

  • comment-avatar
    Mixed Race 10 years ago

    @Mlimo-your comments cannot go unchallenged because you write them with some bit of confusion.You want change but you left the country so you expect others to do the dirty work for you and then come back to enjoy our struggle.You claim that there are about three million educated Zimbabweans outside the country who can fix the economy.I want to tell you that we have qualified people here who can fix the economy provided the conditions are right.The conditions are not right at the moment for us to engage in the proper economy recovery due to poor political decisions.We are a resilient people thus why we refuse to take the easy way out eg leaving the country thus making it easy for these looters to loot without internal opposition.

    • comment-avatar

      People left the country for a lot of different reasons. People have left other countries i.e the USA, England, Botswana, in fact every country in the world has its people working in other countries. I don’t believe that anybody wants anybody to do their dirty work. I have a lot of relatives and friends out of the country who contribute positively to this country by sending money home to their families. I even have a friend that has opened up transport businesses with funds he earned overseas. Those that are over seas or out of the country have a God given right to comment about their country. If the Government has acknowledges these people by trying to sell them bonds how can others on this forum decide those that are not in the country have no say? Those overseas are part of that resilient group and should continue to contribute by supporting their relatives and Politically where they can, and even come home during elections and vote for who they want. The looters started looting long before these people left.

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        Doctor do little 10 years ago

        I think that it is not right to say “fix up the country and we will come back”. Can you blame the people who live in Zimbabwe as the ones who made others leave? Hutu some of what you say makes sense but @Mlimo comment goes a bit overboard when he says fix the country. @Mixed race is correct although I might not go as far as insinuate that people ran away from the problem. As you say it was for a whole lot of different reasons.

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    Johann 10 years ago

    Mbeki and the ANC government are complicit in protecting the dictatorship of Zanu pf. Everyone (including the ANC) knows that Zimbabweans have now voted many times for the removal of this Kleptocracy. The Tiger has a long way to run just so long as the ANC is there, too long for any individual living today to want to hang around to rebuild after this bunch have gone, life is short.

  • comment-avatar
    thembani 10 years ago

    Sorry to diapprove your analysis Eddie.Biti and others in Renewal have destroyed Tsvangirai.Time will tell.Mr Gumbura Morgan has lost a lot of support.

  • comment-avatar
    nyoni 10 years ago

    All Zimbabweans white black brown are entitled to do whatever they want to do. Comment vote critic etc. Its their right. No one is saying who and what should be done to get this rascist dictator to go by the rules. It seems all are afraid of him. The UN etc. Our problem is we simply can not stand united as one. To defeat this beast we must hunt as a team and collectively decide how best to topple the tiger forever so our people never go through this charade ever again.

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      roving ambassador. 10 years ago

      Tops Nyoni, the problem is we are failing to find that one rallying point. We thought we had found it in Tsvangirai but it was only a mirage.
      We all agree that Zanu must disappear . Never to be head off as you say. Agreed.

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    munzwa 10 years ago

    @mlimo, steady on, do not lump all that stayed in Zim as being complicit with zanu, you have no right to claim that you who left are the god given ones!!!! If you were wanting to topple the dictator you would need “troops” within the country would’nt you? Who do you think is “going to get the country right”before you all think of coming back? It is a collective battle, be part of it….