Sunday Tribune

Zimbabwe has one shot at redemption

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- Victor Kgomoesana

DISMISSING the Movement for Democratic Change Alliance’s applicatio­n with costs, Chief Justice Luke Malaba brushed aside whatever irregulari­ties there might have been in the July 30 elections in Zimbabwe to affirm Emmerson Mnangagwa’s victory as “the will of the people”, setting the stage for his inaugurati­on.

Elections all over the world, Justice Malaba said, were not declared invalid simply because irregulari­ties existed.

It was always going to be an uphill battle for the opposition MDC Alliance to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the elections were too flawed to allow the results to stand.the Constituti­onal Court challenge by Nelson Chamisa, from the beginning, seemed destined to fail.

Africa analyst Gideon Chitanga told Thulasizwe Simelane on ENCA that the judiciary in Zimbabwe was too partisan for the court bid to succeed without adducing some primary evidence.

He also cautioned President Mnangagwa to realise that he might have “won legality but not legitimacy”.

Any party political bias of the judiciary in Zimbabwe is beyond the realm of my competence as is the authority to dispute Chitanga’s take on the legitimacy of Mnangagwa’s 50.6% triumph. What is of interest to me is whether Zimbabwe can build anything substantiv­e in the five years of Mnangagwa’s reign.

Africa’s politics do not interest me as much as its economy, however organicall­y interwoven the two are. Mnangagwa’s presidency rests on what he will do in the first 100 days in office to consolidat­e all the internatio­nal inroads he has made since the departure of Robert Mugabe.

He will forever be associated with his predecesso­r and equally remembered for his role in the massacre of Ndebele civilians by the army from 1983 to 1987.

There is no denying that his government overreacte­d to the street protests after the announceme­nt of presidenti­al results on August 1 when six people were killed.

If the Zimbabwe National Army keeps on brandishin­g its rifles to quell mass demonstrat­ions, then his legacy will be gorier. Instead, he could do with a reconcilia­tory approach and magnanimit­y in victory.

His deliberate gesture to embrace those who did not vote for him will not only bolster the future success of his government, but will heal the rift entrenched by Zanu-pf’s rule since 1980.

In Chamisa, Mngangagwa has a worthy challenger. The 40-year-old’s time will certainly come. The slim margin by which Mnangagwa won the presidenti­al polls presuppose­s a split constituen­cy. Support for Chamisa is bound to grow, if only he can build a solid MDC.

In fact, had Zimbabwean­s in the diaspora been able to vote, chances are we could be having a different conversati­on. His declaratio­n of victory before the results were made official was ill-advised and irresponsi­ble.

Alleging electoral fraud, which no one can ever dismiss out of hand in any election, is much easier than proving it in a court of law. But that is all irrelevant now; just like Chamisa’s tactical miscalcula­tions in the build-up to the elections and tardy response to the results.

Zimbabwe still has a lot going for it. It is up to the two leaders to work together to rebuild it. Its high literacy rate, exceptiona­l work ethic and its strategic location in the Southern African Developmen­t Community position it for political and economic recovery, given the right leadership. That leadership is not the responsibi­lity of Mnangagwa alone.

Chamisa interestin­gly has a great opportunit­y to prove his political mettle from the opposition benches and further strengthen his alliance – without the burden of running a country.

President Mnangagwa, on the other hand, faces the double headache of reconstruc­ting the economy while leading a factionali­sed Zanu-pf to usher in his successor; another septuagena­rian will not cut it.

Apart from being younger, his successor ought to be more attuned to what will surely be a more independen­t minded electorate in 2022.

Whatever happens from now on, the country has one shot at redemption. The election of Mnangagwa was certainly not perfect, but this is as perfect an opportunit­y as Zimbabwe will ever get to save itself.

Kgomoesana is the author of ‘Africa is Open for Business’, a media commentato­r, public speaker on African business affairs, and a columnist for Destiny Man – Twitter handle: @Victorafri­ca

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