The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Sapes to host ‘regime change’ conference

- Tichaona Zindoga Political Editor

A CONFERENCE to deliberate on regime change and “transition” in Zimbabwe ahead of next year’s harmonised elections has been slated for Harare later this month.

The conference, running under the theme “Zimbabwe in Transition: Reform and Reconstruc­tion”, is being hosted by the Southern African Political Economic Series Trust (Sapes) on June 29-30 and funded by the United States of America’s National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and British think tank Chatham House.

It will bring together mainly local opposition leaders along with funders, think tanks and academics from the West and region.

Leaders of opposition parties, the MDC-T’s vice president Nelson Chamisa; Mavambo Kusile Dawn (Simba Makoni); People’s Democratic Party (Tendai Biti); National People’s Party (Joice Mujuru) and Zapu (Dumiso Dabengwa) will attend.

The ruling Zanu-PF is barely represente­d, with Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa and former co-chairperso­n in the 2013 national constituti­on-making process, Cde Munyaradzi Paul Mangwana, the only top officials being invited from the party.

NED’s Dave Peterson, Chatham House’s Alex Vines, academic and former advisor to ex-prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai, opposition-leaning academics Philan Zamchiya, Briggs Bomba, Tony Reeler, Brian Kagoro as well as NGO leaders such as Promise Mkwananzi, are expected to present papers.

Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, the umbrella body of anti-Government civil society and non-government organisati­ons linked to the opposition MDC formations, is a partner at the fete.

On Tuesday, Sapes convenor Dr Ibbo Mandaza (pictured above) confirmed the event.

He claimed that the conference was for investment.

“We want to see how we can mobilise investment for reconstruc­tion of the country since at the moment investors are adopting a wait-and-see attitude,” he said.

“It is less about what has happened in the past than what will happen in the future and the way forward,” he added.

However, Dr Mandaza was at pains to explain why there was a predominan­t cast of anti-Government organisati­ons and academics. He conceded that the inclusion of Zanu-PF officials such as Cde Mangwana and other parliament­arians was a “late addition”.

The forthcomin­g event has raised eyebrows due to its timing, ahead of the crucial polls next year, as well as its funders.

NED is one of America’s fronts for regime change in the developing world, although it calls itself “a private, nonprofit foundation dedicated to the growth and strengthen­ing of democratic institutio­ns around the world”.

The organisati­on is cash-flush and is funded by corporate financiers with massive economic and geopolitic­al interests tied to the American ruling elites.

It supports activities in 90 countries through anti-government civil society organisati­ons.

In Zimbabwe, it funds thousands of anti-Government organisati­ons under the banner of Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition.

The London-based Chatham House, also known as the Royal Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs, describes itself as an independen­t policy institute but is widely regarded as antennae of the British system.

Dr Mandaza said NED and Chatham House had been Sapes’ funders and partners since the 1980s and its links to the West.

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