The National - News

With hopes fading among Zimbabwe’s youth, the future again looks bleak for the nation and its democracy

- BRIAN RAFTOPOULO­S Brian Raftopoulo­s is the director of research and advocacy for the Zimbabwean NGO Solidarity Peace Trust and a research fellow at the Internatio­nal Studies Group, University of the Free State, South Africa

The recently completed elections in Zimbabwe, giving a narrow presidenti­al victory to Emmerson Mnangagwa but a decisive parliament­ary showing to Zanu-PF, have led to a contested outcome and further challenges around the Zimbabwean crisis. For millions of Zimbabwean­s both within the country and in the diaspora, the removal of Robert Mugabe in November provided a slim hope of broader changes in the country’s politics. Notwithsta­nding the central role of the military in Mr Mugabe’s downfall, the sense of cathartic joy in his political demise triggered a revived electoral energy ahead of last week’s elections.

However, the results of the elections and the violent state response to opposition protests against the outcome have raised renewed fears and concerns over the impartiali­ty of the election process and the long history of state repression in Zimbabwe. As citizens await the outcome of the opposition electoral challenge, they must once more ponder the future of a deeply divided nation. The election results point to two major political parties that for different reasons are strongly embedded in the Zimbabwean polity.

For much of the post-colonial period, Zanu-PF has built its support through a combinatio­n of the legacies of the liberation struggle, control over rural forms of rule, state repression and support gained from the widespread agrarian changes since 2000. Thus the reality is that Zanu-PF’s support is built on both coercion and uneven forms of consent. On the other hand, the opposition MDC grew out of the struggles of urban groups and its persistent critique of the coercive politics of the ruling party. It has also made some inroads into rural spaces since its formation in 1999.

Both parties have in different ways fractured and restructur­ed over the long-term and through more recent divisions and the effects of this could be seen in the election results. The removal of Mr Mugabe led to lingering factional battles that were apparent in the voting outcome.

While Zanu-PF supporters apparently voted more strongly for their party at parliament­ary level, they were much more reserved in the support of their presidenti­al candidate. With regards to the MDC, the aftermath of another divisive succession struggle in the party and continued divisions within the opposition may once again have affected both the presidenti­al and parliament­ary outcomes.

The opposition protests that followed the elections were a manifestat­ion of the cumulative distrust and anger over the repeated obstructio­n of the democratic rights of Zimbabwean citizens, particular­ly since 2000.

They were also reflective of the rage of youth groups deeply frustrated by long periods of unemployme­nt, poverty and the loss of a positively imagined future. Despite the fact that the elections were the most peaceful in the post1980 era, the long-held citizen mistrust of the Zimbabwean state and its electoral processes could not be shed so easily. Moreover, the violent response of the army to the protests very quickly reaffirmed all the fears around the continuity rather than the changes from Mr Mugabe’s rule. It also pointed to the likely divisions within the security sector as the army very quickly moved in to substitute the role of a police force that is distrusted by the coup leaders.

Both the MDC challenge of the election results and the violent response of the state to the protests of the opposition have created a serious problem for Mr Mnangagwa’s reform and re-engagement strategy. The regional and continenta­l election observer teams of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), the African Union (AU) and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) gave the election an early and predictabl­e endorsemen­t. This was notwithsta­nding certain reservatio­ns regarding the lack of equal public media coverage and concerns around the use of traditiona­l leaders to “intimidate or coerce the rural population”.

The EU and the US have been more critical. The preliminar­y statement of the EU noted that the elections were competitiv­e and “largely peaceful” and political freedoms were respected. However, the statement went on to observe that the misuse of state resources, instances of coercion and intimidati­on, partisan behaviour by traditiona­l leaders and the overt bias of the state media, “all in favour of the ruling party”, meant that a “truly level playing field was not achieved”.

This impacted negatively on the “democratic character of the electoral environmen­t”. Similar concerns were expressed by the US observer teams. All the observer missions condemned the army’s response to the protests.

The current situation presents challenges for national political parties and regional and internatio­nal players. For Zanu-PF, it has to find a way to re-energise what was always a very disputable attempt at reform-re-engagement. For the MDC Alliance, it has to provide sufficient proof of electoral fraud to challenge the legitimacy of the election. The party has declared that it will challenge the results in the Constituti­onal Court and it has until tomorrow to lodge its applicatio­n with the court, under section 93 of the Zimbabwe Constituti­on. The Constituti­onal Court will then have 14 days to decide on the applicatio­n.

Regional and continenta­l players are eager to move the situation along in Zimbabwe and will continue to show solidarity with the party of liberation. However, the situation has been made a little more complicate­d for the SADC by the recent flight of MDC alliance leader Tendai Biti, who was arrested while trying to cross into Zambia. The legal and political tensions over this issue are currently under discussion.

The EU has, since the period of the Government of National Unity from 2008 to 2013, moved towards increasing re-engagement with Zanu PF. The language of reform in the post-coup period held out some hope for more substantiv­e engagement. This position was pushed particular­ly hard by the British government, which made no secret of its desire to develop closer links with the Mnangagwa regime.

However, its reservatio­ns around the elections process and the violence that followed will make it more difficult for the EU to proceed along this path. It is likely to await the outcome of the electoral challenge of the opposition before taking any decision on further realignmen­t.

The US will probably to stick to its current position on sanctions against the Zanu-PF government. As one member of the US observer team noted in a recent interview in Africa Confidenti­al: “It looks like the opportunit­y for re-engagement between Zimbabwe and the US has been squandered.”

Zanu-PF is currently digging in its heels against the opposition and moving once again into repressive mode. The idea of another Government of National Unity is unlikely to find traction in a regime that believes it has a substantia­l electoral mandate.

In this context, the future for millions of Zimbabwean­s both at home and in the diaspora once again looks bleak. This is due to the prospect of persistent unemployme­nt and poverty, desperatel­y fragile livelihood­s that have displaced and divided families into a global diaspora and the increasing­ly dangerous loss of hope in electoral outcomes among its youth.

For Mr Mnangagwa and his ruling party, it will take much more than the reformist promises of a political establishm­ent, structured by a long history of authoritar­ian politics, to shift the political terrain in Zimbabwe onto more promising ground.

This is also a time for the opposition to reflect on its structural weaknesses and forms of politics that have sometimes raised questions about its own democratic trajectory.

This is a time for the opposition to reflect on its structural weaknesses and its own dubious democratic trajectory

 ?? AFP ?? A supporter of the opposition MDC leaves court following his arrest in post-election violence
AFP A supporter of the opposition MDC leaves court following his arrest in post-election violence

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates