NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Biden win: What’s in it for Zim?

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AT the time of going to print last night, indication­s were that United States’ Democratic party candidate John Biden would edge his Republican counterpar­t and incumbent President Donald Trump in the highly-charged presidenti­al poll. While the election outcome could be more significan­t to the American citizens, it will somehow have a strong bearing for a tiny southern African country called Zimbabwe given the frosty relations the two countries have had over the past two decades.

Most Zimbabwean­s were obviously keenly following the elections with the hope that a Biden win would see the US soften its stance on Zimbabwe and possibly lift the sanctions imposed on Harare.

However, that hope could be far-fetched since Biden was one of the four senators who sponsored the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act (Zidera), a targeted sanctions law that was enacted in 2001.

It will be worth noting that even the administra­tion of former President Barack Obama, another Democrat, issued a number of executive orders between 2008 and 2016 to perpetuate Zidera and even toughen the law.

Under the circumstan­ces, it would be naïve for Zimbabwe to expect a change of stance under the new leader.

This is because Zidera demands that the Zanu PF regime guarantees free and fair elections, mineral revenue transparen­cy, commits to economic recovery, and respects the rule of law.

All of these benchmarks are yet to be fully met under the Emmerson Mnangagwa administra­tion.

Mnangagwa blew the golden opportunit­y to win the US to his side and effectivel­y lobby for thawing of relations when he toppled his former boss Robert Mugabe in November 2017 after he failed to implement the anticipate­d reforms.

Another factor which militates against Mnangagwa’s bid for the lifting of sanctions is that the corporate wing of Biden’s Democratic party is a powerful amplifier of opposition and civil society voices in Zimbabwe.

With this in mind, the Mnangagwa administra­tion should seriously introspect and move towards addressing the gray areas highlighte­d under Zidera to improve relations with the US.

Unless that happens, it’s most likely that under Biden, the bipartisan agreement to financiall­y isolate Zimbabwe will remain in force.

To please his supporters, Biden might even be tempted to reset the US foreign policy and champion an imperial global order, which uses human rights speak to coerce the conformity of the global south by threatenin­g economic consequenc­es for countries that dare challenge the orthodoxy of wealth retention by monopoly white capital.

The onus is now on Mnangagwa to reform on his own or be reformed by more punitive sanctions under Biden’s administra­tion.

Sanctions hurt, Zimbabwean­s deserve better.

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