By Eddie Cross
As you all know the SADC summit took place last Sunday with five heads of state attending, and with officials and ministers representing those who could not attend.
They deliberated for 12 hours and then issued a communique that basically endorsed the position adopted by Thabo Mbeki and then the SADC troika.
The most significant part of the exercise was that all 14 states supported the decisions reached. There were no dissenting views.
It was a minor political victory for Robert Mugabe, Mbeki and the troika. It was a major failure of leadership.
The final decision that the two main parties should share control of the ministry of home affairs, and that the rest of the power-sharing deal should stand as agreed by Mbeki, is neither rational nor workable.
It ignores the political realities in Zimbabwe, reduces the chance of success for the new government and could lead to the total collapse of the deal if the Movement for Democratic Change decides to reject the package.
In a rerun of the Kenyan situation - in which regional leaders striving for compromise imposed a solution on Kenya that is a hydra-headed monster, barely capable of walking, let alone running the country - the SADC states have taken the easy route.
In doing so they have run the risk of creating a failed state in Zimbabwe and unleashing uncontrollable violence and destruction.
But, take it or leave it, it's a done deal and an appeal to the African Union or the United Nations, both dysfunctional institutions, will change little. This is the end of the road for negotiations.
At this stage Zimbabwe's future is totally in the MDC and Morgan Tsvangirai's hands.
If we accept what has been decided and go into the new government on this basis, we will be committing ourselves to a near-impossible task.
It will be up to us to turn the economy around, establish conditions for free and fair elections in two years' time, and to try and heal the country, now more deeply divided than ever.
In this exercise neither Zanu-PF nor the Arthur Mutambara group have anything to offer, except to try and not be spoilers.
They bring nothing to the table except failure and corruption, and unrepresentative participation in the state's institutions.
Not one of the Mutambara representatives in the new government will be elected, while the great majority of the Zanu-PF representatives hold their seats through intimidation and rigging.
The problems facing any new government are staggering.
Gross Domestic Product has collapsed to less than half of what it was 10 years ago, the currency is worthless and cannot be used for ordinary transactions anymore, and thousands are dying weekly from starvation, malnutrition and disease.
About 95 percent of all teachers in the public sector are not working, three million children are out of school and hospitals and clinics are either closed or non-functional.
Food supplies have run out and everywhere people are desperately looking for whatever food is available.
The latest news is the aid agencies feeding the majority of the people will run out of food in January, and are cutting allocations by half in December to try and reach four million of the most affected people.
The MDC's dilemma is that if it walks away from the SADC deal it will leave ordinary Zimbabweans naked in a blizzard that will offer only death or flight.
The tragedy of this situation is that Mugabe and Zanu-PF do not give a damn. They want the deal to fail and think they can do "very well" on what is left of the Zimbabwe economy.
They do not worry in any sense about the impact of Zimbabwe's final collapse on our neighbours. They are only concerned about one thing - how to hold on to their total control of the state and thereby protect their standard of living and personal security.
The tragedy of the SADC summit is that it is clear that after all these years - and numerous declarations of commitment to democratic principles and all the recognised human and political rights - when it comes to applying those lofty principles to a real-time political crisis in their midst, they mean nothing.
But that is the reality of African politics at this stage in our history. Not pretty or easy, but the stark reality.
So, what do we do?
Our national council met last week after receiving a report from the leadership, together with recommendations on the way forward.
Unlike our compatriots, we care, we care deeply for the plight of Zimbabweans - all of them affected by the collapse and crisis created by failed leadership, greed and corruption.
This time the consequences of rejection of a flawed deal for our people will be immediate and terrible.
Morgan Tsvangirai stated in Johannesburg that a million people face death from starvation if the SADC-brokered deal collapses. He was not exaggerating.
0 comments:
Post a Comment