The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Violence has no place in Zim’s democratic future

Despite political difference­s, we must not weaken our grasp on that which is most important: maintainin­g peace. We must remember the peace pledge that as political parties we committed ourselves just two short months ago. In that spirit, we urge the oppos

- Dr Sibusiso B. Moyo

TWO weeks ago, millions of Zimbabwean­s queued peacefully to cast their ballots in the freest and fairest election our country has ever experience­d. That day we saw what Zimbabwe should and can be. The following Wednesday, we saw what it must not be.

Protests turned violent in the capital Harare. Six citizens lost their lives in the turmoil: a tragedy for their families, the nation and our democracy. It was not the election that Zimbabwean­s — buoyed by hope of a new era — had expected, nor our internatio­nal partners.

What precisely happened remains unclear. President Mnangagwa has stated he shall institute an independen­t commission to investigat­e the episode. It will comprise both Zimbabwean­s and internatio­nal experts to produce an account free from political influence. It is essential to establish these facts if our democratic journey is to continue.

For while accusation­s and counter-accusation­s reverberat­e across social and traditiona­l media, we must not act in haste borne of allegation. This investigat­ion must progress according to due process. It is times like these we must uphold the law, for now, it is most needed. And whatever the commission’s findings, they shall be fully implemente­d: the perpetrato­rs — regardless of position or politics — shall be identified, held to account and face conviction for their actions.

However, whilst the unsanction­ed violence is indefensib­le, we cannot let it eclipse the people’s democratic expression. The election process represente­d a landmark in Zimbabwe’s progress and developmen­t. Transition was never going to be easy. Yet the reforms that culminated in this momentous vote must be acknowledg­ed.

Zimbabwe opened itself up to internatio­nal scrutiny like never before: over 40 external sets of observers — totaling around 4 500 individual­s — were invited by the administra­tion to monitor the election. This was perhaps the most monitored election ever witnessed in Africa.

One was Nobel Peace Prize recipient and former president of Liberia. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf declared the election free and fair. She was co-lead of the joint internatio­nal observer delegation of the United States’ Internatio­nal Republic Institute and the National Democratic Institute. Many local and internatio­nal observers’ preliminar­y verdicts chimed with her assessment.

Yet this does not mean that some organisati­ons did not find fault including that of Mrs Sirleaf. No electoral process is flawless. The consensus, however, was that the pre-election environmen­t was peaceful, the polling process was transparen­t, and political contenders were free to campaign across the country unhindered.

The opposition leader’s cited injustices stand in contradict­ion to this. But perhaps his most important claim was outright victory in the presidenti­al race before the votes were counted. He made clear that any other result otherwise would be — in his opinion — invalid.

The opposition are welcome to challenge the presidenti­al result in court. Indeed, political stakeholde­rs across the spectrum have urged them to rather than take to the streets. The allegation­s will then receive the scrutiny of court rather than the receptivit­y of the mob; the violent minority amongst the peaceful crowd.

The claim will then be decisively found void or justified. The Government shall respect this verdict and implement it - just as it shall with the independen­t commission’s conclusion on the incidents following polling day. Then Zimbabwe can move forward.

Neverthele­ss, I feel confident that the court will not find in the opposition’s favour. Last Thursday, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission announced that Emmerson Mnangagwa returned 50,8 percent of the vote; the opposition leader 44,3 percent.

On Friday, the Zimbabwe Election Support Network, a group of over 30 NGOs respected by foreign electoral observers, carried out independen­t poll sampling that corroborat­es this outcome; albeit with a 0,1-percent difference to the actual result. Furthermor­e, the ZEC has released individual polling station results on its website to promote transparen­cy. Further scrutiny is welcomed.

Despite political difference­s, we must not weaken our grasp on that which is most important: maintainin­g peace. We must remember the peace pledge that as political parties we committed ourselves just two short months ago. In that spirit, we urge the opposition to accept the court’s ruling on their position.

Our judgment is reached; we must come together and rebuild the nation. The opposition will have a responsibi­lity to challenge the Government openly and transparen­tly - as is their democratic duty — in Parliament. This they owe to their supporters and to all Zimbabwean­s.

Over the past nine months, our nation has taken great strides upon the path of democracy. Along the way, there may be missteps. Yet the determinat­ion of the people to stay on route remains resolute. There is still much ahead of us. And now, united, we must ensure that nothing should block the way. ◆ S. B. Moyo is the Zimbabwe Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade. This article is reproduced from The Daily Caller.

 ??  ?? Zimbabwe held its freest and fairest elections to date on July 30, but two days later the MDC-Alliance rejected the results and went on an orgy of violence looting shops and burning cars in Harare
Zimbabwe held its freest and fairest elections to date on July 30, but two days later the MDC-Alliance rejected the results and went on an orgy of violence looting shops and burning cars in Harare
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe