NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Sanctions: Can Zimbabwean­s speak with a single voice?

- Paidamoyo Muzulu is a journalist based in Harare. He writes here in his personal capacity.

white-owned commercial farms and resettling themselves. Seeing an opportunit­y to revive its waning popularity among the electorate, the Zanu PF administra­tion endorsed the invasions which were chaotic and, in many instances, violent.

Zimbabwe became headline news across the world, inviting the wrath of the UK and the US who immediatel­y started imposing economic sanctions and travel restrictio­ns, accusing the Zanu PF administra­tion of violating citizens’ human, property and political rights.

Economic sanctions have been a punishment of choice for Americans against government­s that upset the global economic structures. Cuba has suffered an economic embargo since 1960 solely because of its communism and nationalis­ation of land and industries after Fidel Castro assumed power through a war.

Iran, too, has suffered the same fate after its 1979 revolution. More recently, socialist administra­tions of Bolivia (Eva Morales), Venezuela (Hugo Chavez) and Greece (Alexis Tsipiraz) have faced the same fate.

Zimbabwe, in a rare diplomatic feat, has gained the support of Sadc and the African Union to have sanctions against the country condemned.

Members of Sadc and AU at the 2020 United Nations General Assembly called for the removal of sanctions against Zimbabwe. Among the countries that openly called for the lifting of sanctions were South Africa, Namibia and Kenya.

The sanctions against Zimbabwe, like South Africa’s African National Congress’s former leader Nelson Mandela listing as a terrorist, may take a while to be lifted considerin­g they are a creature of the United States Congress.

Americans do not repeal their Acts in a hurry but often some laws become abrogated by disuse. It is common cause that the sanctions by the US have made the Zimbabwean economy squeal, with exchange rates swinging wildly and inflation spiralling out of control.

Some of the developmen­ts are in sync with the book An Economic Hitman, which chronicles how the US and the Bretton Woods Institutio­ns are used to bring to heel countries that try to upset the global economic structures.

Despite solidarity from the region and continent, Zimbabwean­s still remain divided on the sanctions question.

The opposition, through its leaders at various internatio­nal fora and on social media, have called on the US and the European Union to keep the sanctions in place.

They view the sanctions as a rod to discipline the Zanu PF administra­tion and force it to implement political and economic reforms.

The main opposition, MDC Alliance, on Thursday boycotted President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s State of the Nation Address that was to mark the beginning of the Third Session of the Ninth Parliament.

Its leaders have also used social media to call their supporters to boycott any activities to do with the regionally-endorsed Anti-Sanctions Day.

Can the difference­s between the administra­tion and the opposition be bridged? Yes, they can. Sanctions have not done Zimbabwean­s any favours over the last two decades.

Zanu PF has consolidat­ed power, the economy is now comatose and the human rights situation is no better than in 2000. And for good measure, the opposition is still miles from assuming power.

Mnangagwa has to implement political and economic reforms not because the US and the EU wants them, but because it is good for Zimbabwe.

The security services — Zimbabwe Defence Forces — and the Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on have to be more profession­al and less partisan.

Actions of security services should not be above the law. They should be made answerable for their acts of impunity. Those implicated in the August 1 2018 fatal shooting of six unarmed civilians should have their day in court.

Publicly-owned media should be truly national and represent the diversity in this country and not be a mouthpiece of the ruling party — Zanu PF.

On the economic front, cartels and corrupt bureaucrat­s should be weeded out. The economy should be run in the interest of the majority and not the few.

And finally, the social contract as argued by Jean Jacques Rosseau should be respected — the rulers should rule with the consent of the ruled. This may not be asking too much from the administra­tion. Sanctions should be lifted and let the poor breathe.

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