The Herald (Zimbabwe)

MDC-Alliance congress exposes log in party’s eye

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Philemon Mutedzi Correspond­ent

IME has an uncanny habit of exposing hypocrisy, and often times, vindicatin­g formally perceived villains. It is a double-edged sword. In Zimbabwe, time has helped us unravel the duplicitou­s behaviour of some of our political players in a damning fashion.

The opposition, mainly the MDC-Alliance, has often, albeit for political expedience, cried foul over alleged electoral malpractic­es in national elections. That party has always used allegation­s of intimidati­on, electoral fraud, tinkered voters’ roll, violence, among a litany of unfounded complaints, all aimed at obfuscatin­g the electoral process and to push for electoral reform, as well as justify its poor performanc­e during elections.

One would ordinarily think that, it is a party which stands for democracy. A party that thinks democracy. A party that breathes democracy. A party of excellence in democracy. But time is a troublesom­e child. It pesters you today, exposes your yesterday and shames you in posterity. The MDC vaunts itself as a movement for democratic change, an acronym that presuppose­s that it prides itself as a custodian of democracy, both internally and externally.

However, history and time have chosen to be brutal on this movement. It has turned out to be a movement for undemocrat­ic change.

The death of Morgan Tsvangirai (may his soul continue to rest in peace), that party’s inevitable loss in the 30 July, 2018 and the delayed congress to be held in May 2019, have all conspired to expose the shocking democracy deficit in the MDC-Alliance.

The jostling for posts ahead of the MDC-Alliance congress has exposed the party as an anti-thesis of democracy. It is an autocracy, where village politics is the order of the day. Wary of the threat to his disputed leadership of the Alliance, coming from secretary-general, Douglas Mwonzora, and vice president, Elias Mudzuri, Nelson Chamisa unleashed his Vanguard hooligans in Harare to threaten and intimidate his rivals.

The hooligans led by provincial youth assembly vice chairman, Stan Manyenga, held a presser, where they declared that Chamisa was not going to be contested by anyone, and that anybody, who would do that was an enemy of that party.

There is residual fear in the MDC, where violence has been consistent­ly used to cow down opponents, dating as far back as 2005, when the initial split occurred. Time is deadly, it exposes duplicity. Welshman Ncube, Trudy Stevenson, Elton Mangoma, Tendai Biti, Thokozani Khupe, just to mention a few, have all been attacked by the infamous Democratic Resistance Committee, now aptly called the Vanguard.

It is hypocritic­al, if not shocking, that a party with a glittering history of undemocrat­ic behaviour internally finds fault with peaceful national elections. The last elections were held in a peaceful, tolerant environmen­t, which was only sullied after the plebiscite when the MDC-Alliance instigated bloody riots on 1 August, 2018.

The MDC-Alliance has oft claimed that ZANU-PF tinkers with the voters’ roll to win elections, an issue that Government “addressed” to appease that party through the implementa­tion of the Biometric Voters’ Roll. Despite this gesture of goodwill, the MDC-Alliance still dismally lost the election.

Ahead of the MDC-Alliance congress, there are irrefutabl­e reports published by a private newspaper with sympathies for that party, which note that there is internecin­e factional fighting in the party’s restructur­ing exercise ahead of Congress.

Party bigwigs are doctoring dodgy party lists of structures at branch, ward and district level with a view to influence the electoral college that will vote at the main congress. MDC-Alliance organising secretary, Amos Chibaya, is at sixes and sevens on which lists to use for the restructur­ing since there are three lists, one each for the Chamisa, Mwonzora and Mudzuri factions. It is dog-eat-dog. Is this democracy? A party that questions the integrity of the national voters’ roll, itself does not even have one. This is hypocrisy writ large.

The violent skirmishes in the MDC-Alliance culminated in the circulatio­n of a video of an MDC-Alliance district organising secretary being pummelled by irate pro-Chamisa hooligans for having expunged or excluded pro-Chamisa members on her list. Whatever the case, the outcome of the MDC-Alliance congress will be a sham. It will be undemocrat­ic. It will be rigged.

Chamisa’s henchmen, realising the real and present threat being posed by Mwonzora to their principal’s ambitions of being elected president, systematic­ally started eliminatin­g pro-Mudzuri and Mwonzora party leaders in lower structures.

History has treated Chamisa harshly after being soundly beaten by Mwonzora to the secretary-general’s post. They cannot allow history to repeat itself again.

It is common cause that anyone under disciplina­ry proceeding­s is automatica­lly disqualifi­ed from participat­ing in party programmes, including the restructur­ing exercise ahead of congress.

Wary of these shenanigan­s, Mwonzora, as secretary-general, has moved to veto any suspension­s and expulsions ahead of congress, declaring that all disciplina­ry issues will have to be sanctioned by the standing committee.

This is not democracy bringing spurious and contrived allegation­s against fellow party members as a tool of subverting democracy.

The sustained use of intimidati­on, coercion, threats of violence, name-calling and labelling is being systematic­ally employed by the Chamisa faction to cow down lower structures from nominating either Mwonzora or Mudzuri from contesting Chamisa. Recently, during a rally in Mutare, a hired crowd that had been given money and placards booed and disrupted Mwonzora from speaking, labelling him a sell-out for challengin­g Chamisa.

As if the foregoing undemocrat­ic politics in the MDC-Alliance are not enough, there is palpable chauvinism and sexism aimed at alienating women from positions of leadership. There is a calculated effort to disenfranc­hise women in a similar manner that former MDC-T co-vice president, Thokozani Khupe, was elbowed out of that party based on her sexuality by Chamisa.

MDC-Alliance’s ward 28 candidate for Cowdray Park, Collet Ndlovu, said that, “women need men in positions of power because they are afraid, hence if crushed, they keep quiet.” Such crude, sexist and out-ofsync comments about women during Women’s month, fly in the face of women emancipati­on.

They come straight from Chamisa’s uncivilise­d playbook, where he has previously placed a bet to give off his sister, if he lost to President Mnangagwa, a promise he is yet to deliver.

The male chauvinism in the MDC-Alliance has reached a crescendo, with nude pictures of Kariba deputy mayor, Farai Magevha, being leaked on social media as a way of elbowing her out ahead of the restructur­ing exercise.

Chamisa-aligned hawks have started processes to institute disciplina­ry proceeding­s against her for being a victim of a leak that exposed her womanhood.

It is equally shameful that the so-called motley host of pro-democracy activists have choose to draw misplaced and false similariti­es between the undemocrat­ic actions of the MDC-Alliance to ZANU-PF.

They cannot stomach the reality that ZANU-PF is an institutio­n with known structures and is a stickler for constituti­onalism.

In chastising the MDC-Alliance’s undemocrat­ic practices, they cunningly rope in ZANU-PF.

It is trite that the duplicitou­s and hypocritic­al behaviour of the Movement for Undemocrat­ic Change be exposed for what it is.

The MDC-Alliance approaches Government with dirty hands on matters electoral.

Their leader is an unelected individual who grabbed power at a funeral.

His conduct, and that of his acolytes, would make most dictators green with envy. Zimbabwean politics will remain poor with an undemocrat­ic opposition which believes in archaic politics that are anti-democracy. The MDC-Alliance does not walk the talk on democracy.

It must practice what it preaches, not to practice what it preaches against.

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