Africa Action Urges World Support in Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe Power Sharing Deal: A Historic Moment of Possibilities and Challenges
Africa Action Urges International Support for Social and Economic Justice to Build on Landmark Pact
Tuesday, September 15, 2008 (Washington, DC) – The signing yesterday of a political settlement between Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe and opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leaders Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara presents historic possibilities and challenges for the Southern African country. Africa Action has echoed Zimbabwean civil society by advocating a neutral transitional government with a time-delineated mandate to open up democratic space and allow for future free and fair elections. Although the settlement reached is not such a transitional arrangement, we respect the product of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)-facilitated dialogue among Zimbabwe’s political leaders and welcome the potential of the newly announced Government of National Unity to dramatically improve the living conditions of ordinary Zimbabweans. We urge the U.S. government to support unity and peace and break from the West’s failed history of damaging economic structural adjustment policies by promoting truly people-centered development for Zimbabwe.
The agreement between Zimbabwe’s political parties presents real opportunities to bring an end to the devastating economic and political crises of the last ten years. Today, Zimbabwe is a battered nation saddled with 11 million percent inflation, over 80 percent unemployment, collapsed healthcare and education systems and acute shortages of almost all basic commodities. These hardships have driven an estimated four million Zimbabweans to leave the country in search of opportunity. We share the sense of urgency felt by millions of Zimbabweans keenly awaiting the end of these conditions and the restoration of hope in their lives.
While it is too early to fully assess Zimbabwe’s trajectory, Africa Action believes that four factors are critical moving forward:
1) Unity
We
believe that Zimbabwe’s success depends on the ability of
the parties to the deal to work together in a genuine spirit
of national unity. In that regard, we urge Zimbabwe’s
political leaders to transcend narrow partisan interests and
prioritize the wide social and economic concerns of the
people of Zimbabwe. We call on the U.S. government to desist
from a damaging partisan policy in Zimbabwe and take
guidance from the interests of ordinary Zimbabweans.
The lack of clarity on how Zimbabwe’s new government is supposed to function with its apparent twin cabinet structure raises concerns that despite the agreement, precious time, energy and resources may be lost in bureaucratic rivalries and political jockeying.
2)
International Support
Zimbabwe’s future
depends on the quality of the international support it will
receive. Zimbabwe owes over $5 billion to the African
Development Bank and other international financial
institutions. For Zimbabwe to escape its current economic
morass, this debt noose must be broken. We urge 100%
cancellation of all odious and illegitimate debts and
restructuring of other debts to give Zimbabwe fiscal
breathing space to attend to pressing social and economic
needs such as health and education and to create employment
by reviving the battered agriculture and manufacturing
sectors. An audit of Zimbabwe’s public debt, as called for
by civil society groups such as the Zimbabwe Coalition on
Debt and Development (ZIMCODD), is of critical importance.
New international lending will be an important part of
Zimbabwe’s economic recovery, but such financial flows
must be based on a set of just, responsible lending
principles. Rather than imposing a new structural adjustment
program of the sort that contributed to the collapse of
Zimbabwe’s economy during the 1990s, the U.S. should work
with the international community to engage Zimbabwe’s
government, private sector and civil society in developing
creative, people-driven solutions to the current economic
chaos. Fair and just international trade policies will be
essential to any such revival.
3) Democratic
Institutions
Robust democratic institutions and
civil society organizations will play a key role in fencing
in democratic progress and safeguarding against corruption
and human rights abuses. Zimbabwe needs to engage in an
urgent national dialogue to develop a new binding democratic
constitution and immediately open up space for citizens to
freely associate and participate in national political
processes. Robust government and nongovernmental
institutions that operate independent of political pressures
should be created and empowered to address corruption and
accountability in the new government.
4) Truth, Justice
and Reconciliation
After a decade of gross human
rights violations and the atrocities of the 1980s, Zimbabwe
needs a truth, justice and reconciliation process to ensure
accountability and facilitate long-lasting national healing.
Families of those who disappeared need to know what happened
to their loved ones and who is responsible. The corruption,
violence and political murders of the last ten years and the
massacres of the early 1980s cannot simply be swept under
the carpet during this transition. Perpetrators of the
worst abuses must be brought to justice, and if individuals
are to be forgiven, it must be done publicly as part of a
transparent truth, justice and reconciliation process.
Electoral Precedents and Just Priorities
While
welcoming the opportunities presented by the political
settlement, Africa Action remains concerned about the
problems the Government of National Unity raises about
democracy not only in Zimbabwe, but also for Africa in
general. Along with Kenya’s recent political crisis,
Zimbabwe’s experience sets a dangerous precedent whereby
the incumbent regimes relied on the force of coercion to
resist the will of the people as expressed through
elections, forcing a negotiated settlement. Across Africa,
the international community must work with civil society to
promote democratic institutions and political cultures that
not only allow for free and fair elections but also the
unhindered transfer of power to the winners. In that regard,
independent electoral commissions, professional security
forces and independent judiciaries are vital.
As Zimbabwe moves to settle its political stalemate, we urge its leaders to immediately attend to the social justice issues as expressed by Zimbabwe’s civil society in the Zimbabwe People’s Charter. Beyond political rights, the people of Zimbabwe must be guaranteed social justice, including a living wage for workers, access to health care and education, and other basic necessities. U.S. international engagement with Zimbabwe must be driven by these priorities.
Contact: Michael Swigert (202) 546-7961