By Takura Zhangazha*
In the last fortnight, there has been a somewhat muted
launch of the ‘yes’ vote campaign for the COPAC draft constitution by the political parties in the inclusive government. One
of the parties, the MDC T, sought to do so in grandiose fashion by holding a 'yes' campaign launch rally in Gweru last weekend. One can only assume that it was supposed to
be a massive rally which would show how much
support they have and also indicate that they do not care about political
principles or values, so long they have their supporters heeding their every
word. As it turns out, the rally was neither as big nor as emphatic. Perhaps it
was because of the rains that fell or perhaps it was because there is
inadequate popular support for COPACs draft constitution, even if that party’s leaders claim to have greater numbers at their
beck and call.
The media has also been reporting that there has been low
attendance to the meetings that have been called either by COPAC or other
political parties in support of the draft. Some of the reasons given by the organisers of these meetings have been that there was not enough notice or
alternatively there were not enough copies of the draft by the time the
meetings began. In response, and again as reported in the media, citizens have definitively argued that there is too little time given for them to read and understand the
draft or alternatively, if they are party supporters and activists, they just
reply that they will follow the instructions of their political leaders.
All of these developments indicate that there is some unfortunate political dishonesty going on over and about the ‘yes’ vote campaign. It is a dishonesty
that has the immediate effect of exposing the flawed and evidently undemocratic
nature of the process as well as indicative of the dictatorial and centralist
politics that is now a shared characteristic of the parties in the inclusive government
as well as those that are acting as their lackeys. It is also indicative of political
leaders that are unfortunately caught up in the mistaken view that the people
they lead are cattle to be herded in whatever direction the herdman/woman
thinks and this, without their consent.
It would have been fair to assume that perhaps those campaigning
for the yes vote understood the full import of the draft constitution they are proposing.
Some of those who are at the helm of leading this yes campaign have neither
read nor understood the document in question and are always caught out in media
interviews or some civic society organized public meetings as being either ignorant
of its contents or as being patently dishonest about its import. So even if one were to
argue (in incremental fashion) that indeed the process was flawed, it would
still be a herculean task to accept the argument based on content from people
who either do not know the document’s contents or who are deliberately
misrepresenting its articles.
Further dishonesty in the 'ye's campaign is found in the fact that
some of its supporters have taken on a very personal approach to the matter.
This includes wanting to be personally written in the annals of history as the progenitors
of a new constitution for Zimbabwe. This would not be a problem were it not appearing to be done for mere personal recognition and
not for democratic values or principles. And in this, there is the dishonesty of misrepresenting
the facts of the draft constitution and positing of the argument that ‘any
change is better’ without giving people adequate time to read and understand the document for themselves.
And this is coming from persons who were either leaders or
direct participants to the 2000 rejection of the Chidyausiku Commissions draft
constitution. A rejection which they wrongly refer to as having been a mistake
and yet the true agenda was the articulation by the majority voters that they
would really like to see a people driven draft constitution. By any democratic
measure, the participants in the 'yes' campaign know full well that their process
and document fails the ‘people driven’ test as articulated by the NationalConstitutional Assembly (NCA) and in the Zimbabwe Peoples Charter. It is no
longer in any way a document for posterity but a document of their personal political
moments which history will be wary to remember.
When taken into full account and from whatever angle one
views it from, the current 'yes' vote campaign is an exercise in political dishonesty.
This is initially and fundamentally in
relation to the process which was driven by political parties in the inclusive
government without the democratic participation of other stakeholders. And secondly in relation to the contents of
the draft which do not signify any significant democratic shift from the
politics that informed and informs the current constitution. Thirdly and
finally, the dishonesty resides in the elitist and spoon-feeding paternalistic attitude
that informs the conduct of the parties and persons campaigning for a 'yes' vote.
They will not even allow adequate time for people to debate their flawed document,
let alone either get a copy or read it, a process and campaign that can only be defined as a national travesty.
* Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogpost.com)
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