Mail & Guardian

Zim needs real reforms

-

It’s official. Zimbabwe will hold its parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections on July 30. For the first time in recent memory, Robert Mugabe and his nemesis, Morgan Tsvangirai, will not be standing as incumbent and opposition leader respective­ly.

After the “soft coup” of November 2017, which deposed Mugabe from State House into a de facto gilded prison, these elections seem likely to legitimise President Emmerson “the Crocodile” Mnangagwa as the people’s chosen leader, rather than merely the beneficiar­y of the military’s might.

But painful experience has shown us that plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose (the more things change, the more they stay the same). Mnangagwa will not, on his own, be a salve to Zimbabwe’s problems despite his stagemanag­ed narrative of a “new dispensati­on”.

The restoratio­n of full state legitimacy cannot happen without both tangible economic and political reform. And these remain unlikely as long as the independen­ce of key state institutio­ns remains in question — particular­ly that of the security forces, the judiciary, the electoral commission and state media.

In this tableau of power lies a lesson for South Africans who are also experienci­ng a “new dawn”. Can those who actively served in and were complicit in an administra­tion characteri­sed by poor governance and rampant looting really turn the page? Despite the carefully crafted hyperbole from the top and a host of hopeful commentato­rs, Zimbabwe’s road to democratic redemption remains, unfortunat­ely, potholed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa