By
Takura Zhangazha.
The passage of time is a
rarely considered element in our national political discourse. A year begins
and a year ends and we are all afflicted by short memories. Momentous political
events are not easily remembered even in the wake of their occurrence. Instead
they are left to the academic historians or the now rare village griot to recount many years after.
2011 might however not be an easy year to forget. As it comes to a close, it must be remembered as an
internationally momentous year. From the ‘revolutions’ in Tunisia and Egypt
that were phenomenal in their occurrence
and somewhat not as significantly defined in their aftermath. Close on the heels of these revolutions was the
removal from power of Ivory Coast’s Laurent Gbagbo and Libya’s Muammah Qadafi from
power via direct liberal intervention by France and Nato respectively. These
interventions left the African Union’s weak standing in international relations
literally confirmed while the long awaited independence of South Sudan brought
fresh hope for that country’s civil war to come to a final end.
Other events such as the assassination
of Osama bin Laden and the riots by young British citizens were felt more in
the West than elsewhere, while the Global Financial crisis though epitomized most
tellingly by the events and change of government in Greece, is only beginning
to be felt in Zimbabwe via the reduction of donor funding to government
programmes on health such as the Global Fund to combat HIV/AIDS.
But to be specific to
Zimbabwe, we began the year 2011 with a lot of what was then considered serious
political tension. There were disputes over outstanding issues in the inclusive
government and SADC made interventions via a still very disputed Livingstone
Troika summit in March. The issues that were considered ‘outstanding’ by the
three parties in the GPA which included an election roadmap, the expansion of JOMIC,
the role of the military and human rights violations remain outstanding as we approach
the end of 2011. At the time they were being presented, there was a sense of
urgency which has turned out be a false urgency. And this is what has come to
be the definitive character of our national politics in Zimbabwe via the
inclusive government.
Throughout the whole year we
have been threatened with a referendum
and elections. Where the three parties have held congresses or conferences, the
language has been that of creating a sense of urgency that is not grounded in
political reality and therefore has been false. And as 2011 comes to close, we
should expect the cycle to continue in the aftermath of the Zanu Pf conference
which predictably will insist on elections in 2012, a year short of the government
and parliament serving out its constitutional five year term. And as the
political parties continue with their false senses of urgency, there is the
continuation of repression of the media, human rights activists and ordinary
members of the public.
When it comes to reviewing the
socio-economic problems that the country faced through 2011, limited little changed
significantly. The government economic reform programmes have a broad
neo-liberal framework that , judging by the policy pronouncements and speeches
of cabinet ministers, wrongly places emphasis on private-public partnerships
(PPPs).
In the course of the year, the
only real evidence of these PPPs has been the government’s policy of economic
empowerment and indigenization via Community Share Trusts. Whether these CSTs
become of any public benefit, is yet to be seen but it is evident that due to
the political contests over the matter together with the politicization of the
entirety of the process, these CSTs are more likely to have a trickle down
effect on the lives of the communities they are intended to benefit.
As in 2010 the government still
does not have comprehensive health, transport and education (including
tertiary) plans. Its approach has been to douse out fires, if it does so at
all. To be specific, in the health
services there is the perennial challenge of over-dependence on international
partners, who should they decide to move elsewhere or say they have run out of
funding as with the Global Fund, the country is left high and dry. In relation
to education, the government continued to grapple with teachers salaries
without taking a holistic review of the entirety of the education system to
make it work. This essentially means once again, come January 2012, we will be
faced with a teachers strike, high tertiary and school fees,
As regards, transport, the
government has done next to little to improve public transportation systems.
The National Railways of Zimbabwe works intermittently and there is still no
visible evidence as to what the road tollgate revenue is being utilized for. More
often than not the Ministry of Transport is threatening car dealers and owners
with a banning of one thing or the other as regards motor vehicles. Similarly the
ministries of Youth and Women’s affairs, who have misunderstood the young
people and women of Zimbabwe by assuming
that all they want are ‘projects’ yet none of them have offered a comprehensive
public works framework to deal with the high levels of unemployment in the
country.
As it is and as the year 2011
comes to a closure Zimbabwe and its citizens are running the risk of continuing
with a political cycle that has become less about the people and more about the
people in government. Their disputes and actions have largely been partisan not
only on behalf of their political parties but also on behalf of their ‘comfort
zones’( to which they have demonstrated an unfortunate sense of entitlement to
via their purchase of luxury vehicles, unclear mineral and iron production
deals, numerous trips abroad). And as the new year approaches, it is hoped that
civil society, members of the public shall at some point begin to hold the
inclusive government to account with regards to its performance legitimacy, and
not just the politics of elections.
the year 2011 brought little change if not any.while revolutions in North Africa brought change,it remains to be seen whether this change lasts and bears fruit.In our Zimbabwean context however nothing has changed,the same threats of holding elections and the rushing for a conclusion on the constitution was what characterized 2011.as we get into 2012,it remains to be seen if the political parties will sing from different hymn books.
ReplyDeleteThanks Raw Edge. Good points about whether or no the change lasts in North Africa.. or the nature of change itself..
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