Anger against Mugabe grows

via Anger against Mugabe grows – DailyNews Live 21 December 2014 by Tendai Kamhungira

HARARE – There is an unprecedented groundswell of anger across the political and social divides in the country against President Robert Mugabe and Zanu PF’s misrule, with analysts saying yesterday that this boded well for keenly-anticipated national elections scheduled for 2018.

Among the prominent political players who have raised their voices against the country’s deteriorating political and economic climate are opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, Zapu president Dumiso Dabengwa, MKD leader Simba Makoni, United MDC leading lights Welshman Ncube and Tendai Biti, outspoken war veteran and former legislator Margaret Dongo, and former Zanu PF stalwarts such as Didymus Mutasa, Rugare Gumbo and ex-war veterans’ leader Jabulani Sibanda.

Analysts told the Daily News on Sunday yesterday that it was good that key opposition figures were increasingly speaking out against undemocratic tendencies in Zanu PF and the country.

However, they added, this did not mean that the opposition was in a position to take Mugabe and Zanu PF head-on at the moment.

Dewa Mavhinga, who is with Human Rights Watch, said while the criticism of the ruling party was good for democracy, the fact still remained that power in Zimbabwe did not reside in political parties per se and was also not secured through normal democratic processes like elections.

“Instead, those who wield political power like President Mugabe and the ruling Zanu PF party rely on State institutions including the highly-partisan and politicised leadership of the security forces.

“Therefore, although Mujuru and company may add to the number of people unhappy with Mugabe’s dictatorship, the key to seriously confronting Mugabe and Zanu PF lies in reforming security forces and other State institutions which are under Mugabe and Zanu PF’s partisan control,” he said.

He added that any grand coalition that could emerge in the country would not necessarily be effective going forward for as long as State institutions like the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission were allegedly in Mugabe’s and Zanu PF’s pocket.

“The only successful political grand coalition against Mugabe and Zanu PF is one that cuts the political umbilical cord that unites Zanu PF and the State and stops Zanu PF from getting its life-blood from the State.

“With genuinely strong, independent and democratic institutions in place, including an independent and non-partisan Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, a political grand coalition would not even be necessary as Zanu PF would naturally be history,” he said.

Mavhinga said Mugabe’s former allies, who were now disgruntled with his misrule, just like the opposition, were hamstrung by the fact that they were long-standing beneficiaries of Mugabe’s patronage and Zanu PF’s corrupt tendencies.

“This might compromise them and prevent them from joining hands with opposition forces to fight Mugabe who can easily have them stripped of all their wealth and social status overnight.

“In order to protect their ill-gotten wealth, many of these Zanu PF rejects may decide to quietly walk away from the political scene without openly challenging Mugabe in a grand coalition,” he said, citing the threats to arrest former Vice President Joice Mujuru and takeover former senior party official Ray Kaukonde’s farm as examples.

Analyst Shephered Mntungwa said it was good for Zimbabwe’s nascent democracy that leading opposition figures were speaking with one voice against Mugabe’s and Zanu PF’s misrule.

“It’s unprecedented that the opposition is speaking with one voice against misrule in the country. Zimbabweans are generally used to hearing a divided and confused opposition that is more adept at sniping against each other than pushing the ruling party.

“To that extent, the opposition can be positive going into the critical 2018 elections, particularly if one takes into account the likelihood that President Mugabe, who is the glue that holds Zanu PF together, will probably not participate in those polls,” he said.

But Kent law lecturer, Alex Magaisa, said an anti-Mugabe approach alone was not enough to unite the ousted Zanu PF cadres and opposition parties.

“This has been the approach for the last 15 years and it has not worked. Besides, everything shows that we are entering a post-Mugabe phase and therefore uniting because you are against Mugabe is by itself not enough.

“Zanu PF is busy reinventing itself but there is no traction in the opposition forces. So I am not very optimistic that there will really be a formidable force against Zanu PF. The opposition elements have to get over their often petty differences first and identify an ideological point that unites them,” Magaisa said.

Criticism of Mugabe and the ruling party has been strident over the past few months, particularly since feisty First Lady Grace Mugabe entered the political fray — amid allegations that there had effectively been a “bedroom coup” at State House, as many of her threats and pronouncements have come to pass.

In addition, Mugabe, who turns 91 in February, has fallen out with most of his trusted former liberation war colleagues, who have since criticised him and the party of liberation, particularly its controversial damp squib “elective” congress that was held in Harare earlier this month.

They have also gone on to accuse Mugabe of subverting the party’s constitution and making unilateral decisions to suit his and Grace’s interests.

Former Zanu PF secretary for administration Didymus Mutasa, for one, has described the congress as a “farce”.

“Even the most impartial observer could not fail to regard the recent Congress of the governing party, Zanu PF, as a farce,” he said.

Expelled former Zanu PF spokesperson  Gumbo described the congress as a circus that could mark the last rites of the former liberation movement.

Gumbo like former war veterans leader Jabulani Sibanda, believed Zanu PF had been hijacked by chancers.

Sibanda, like Gumbo, has since been expelled from the party, and also been incarcerated under controversial circumstances for allegedly undermining Mugabe and coining the widely popular “bedroom coup” saying.

His case is still pending at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts.

Former Home Affairs minister,  Dabengwa has also added his voice on the unsavoury goings-on in Zanu PF, asserting that he is devising a new plan to fight the ruling party.

“As Zapu, we are in discussions with the ousted Zanu PF cadres, the likes of former Vice President Joice Mujuru, Gumbo, Kaukonde, Mutasa and the engagements are on course as we try to put our heads together to prevent dictatorship because we foresee that there is the possibility of it in the party.

“The ousted cadres shouldn’t take their fate lying down,” Dabengwa was quoted in lickspittle State media yesterday.

Even outspoken former Zanu PF party legislator, Margaret Dongo, panned Mugabe and the ruling party for their misrule, alleging that the nonagenarian was in fact being abused by some party officials who harboured sinister motives.

But political analyst Pedzisayi Ruhanya criticised the opposition for not doing enough to push Mugabe and Zanu PF.

“The opposition is in comatose. Where is Tsvangirai? Where is Welshman? Where is Biti?” he asked, adding that Zanu PF could even afford to do what it was doing because there was no vibrant force challenging it.

He told the Daily News on Sunday that the MDC formations were “descending and not ascending”, adding that there was a danger that they might even sink into political oblivion.

“If Zanu PF is having problems, it does not mean Tsvangirai is gaining ground. The critical aspect is to look for long term reforms in the electoral process,” he said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 8
  • comment-avatar
    MikeH 9 years ago

    Well, it’s my guess that there will be a few more mysterious car crashes in the not too distant future.

  • comment-avatar
    C Frizell 9 years ago

    Well, it is nice to see people dreaming but they are far, far away from reality.

    The tragedy of our country is that the people were suckers for the Mafia’s use of their greed and racism. The land grab has been the greatest disaster in our country’s history, yet even now no one wants to admit that it was based purely on greed and racism – and was the root cause of the destruction of our economy.

    So, I do not enjoy being in exile, but I feel very little sympathy for all those in Zimbabwe who willingly and happily brought this disaster on themselves.

    I have been saying for many years that ZPF will never be removed through “democratic means” which means that Zimbabweans have to do some serious soul-searching

    • comment-avatar

      @ C Frizell problem with Zimbabweans at home and in the diaspora is that they are out of sync with each other. I have read your contributions and respect the fact that you truly love you country. I don,t know how long it has been since you have been to Zimbabwe.Some would argue that Ian Smith was partly responsible for the creation of this monster. Some might say had he listened to Tim Gibbs and others this might not have taken place. I on the other hand would say that Ian Smith might have done things a bit differently if he had a crystal ball.The Zimbabwean people like Ian Smith did not have a crystal ball either. Neither did Margaret Thatcher and Queen Elizabeth. I don’t think the people need anybody’s sympathy at the moment.We are having rapour at this moment and of course everyone that has any love for this teapot shaped land mass should be involved. People have done their soul searching. We done it in fuel ques. We done it in meal meal ques an so on and so on. We have cried together. We have buried our own together. What ever the future holds on the land and other issues will unfold eventually.The people have been patient. Because of that we have avoided a Somalia. The threat of that still looms. If you study the set up now you realize that Zimbabwe is in the eye of the storm. How we handle the situation when we move out of that is key to our normalization. Zanu will pass soon and Zimbabwe shall rise again, this time with all it,s different races stronger. After all some of those that are of different skin color, or from Malawian back rounds do not have ancestry rights in the country of their great great Grand parents and this is the only home they have ever know. Lauren Oliver said “It’s so strange how life works: You want something and you wait and wait and feel like it’s taking forever to come. Then it happens and it’s over and all you want to do is curl back up in that moment before things changed.”

  • comment-avatar
    Rodlin Mvelase 9 years ago

    If there is seriousness among the opposition and disgruntled Zanu puff cadres to dislodge Mugabe and his rogue team, the time is now..why talk of 2018? Strike the hammer while the iron is still hot. There is als this myth that security services are pro-Mugabe, this is no where near the truth. The security services are just as angry as the rest of all but what is lacking is political direction among opposition parties or the public taking things to their own hands.
    Problem with Zimbabwe is there is so much mistrust, the issue is not as invincible as appears….rangova zuru rakapinda nyoka.

  • comment-avatar
    tsuro 9 years ago

    It is my humble suggestion that all these form a united front under some neutral figure head person. The nominated person leads the party to a transitional government, which would address governance issues and create a fair even ground for all parties to participate leading to elections in a period of say two-three years. The nominated persona also makes a pledge not to hijack the people’s cause and seek being elected himself as happened with the bishop. I suggest a person like Strive Masiwa, Sandura etc. Allow me to dream.

    After restoration of power to the people and making the necessary constitutional changes the transitional government is then disbanded and we go into elections with the parties running as separate entities.

  • comment-avatar
    Rodlin Mvelase 9 years ago

    @Tsuro you are right on the issue of a transitional authority, we do not need a GNU but a cross sectional representation of civic society that can re-align all laws to be in tune to the constitution and have a clear road map for free, fair and transparent election. An authority that would promote investment and see to proper accountability of our mineral wealth.
    But first things first, we can not afford to have these rogue thugs in power till 2018 else we will be first SADC nation to have a blood bathe. Tensions and tempers are too high within Zanu puff and security services and if this is left unchecked fast we going one way. Security services are not all Mugabe bootlickers and departure of the now senile old man will lead to urban warfare.
    To opposition MPs, team up with 100 angry dis enchanted Zanu MPs and pass vote of no confidence on President and his government or Zanu MPs pull the carpet under Mugabe’s feet and create constitutional crisis that way the toothless SADC& AU will come running into the country. Resign from parliament necessitating by-elections in half the country. Will you stand up and do what’s best for Zimbabwe by using parliamentary muscle?

  • comment-avatar
    Sadness 9 years ago

    Now is the time. PF now in confusion, Mugabe and wife can be stopped from coming back.

    People are ready, isolate Manangawgwa and the politburoo members, isolate the big wigs and form a new government with the people.

  • comment-avatar
    Umvukela wama Ndebele 9 years ago

    Please my country man lets do it the Libyan style those Zanu pf thugs wont kill us