By Wilbert Mukori: The MDC Alliance continues its “diplomatic offensive” with Tendai Biti, MDC A VP, meeting the British Minister of State for Africa Affairs, Harriet Baldwin. What is clear to everyone expect MDC A leaders is that Zimbabwe’s economic and political crisis is one of MDC A’s own making.
“The election of 2018 remains contested. The crisis of
legitimacy remains at the fore of the crisis in Zimbabwe as I talk to you right
now,” Tendai Biti told his audience at Chaltam House the other day.
Contested by whom? Certainly not by the British, the EU, the
Commonwealth, the Americans and everyone else who observed the elections and
KNOW what constitutes free, fair and credible elections.
“The electoral commission lacked full independence and
appeared to not always act in an impartial manner. The final results as
announced by the Electoral Commission contained numerous errors and lacked adequate
traceability, transparency and verifiability,” stated the EU final report.
“Finally, the restrictions on political freedoms, the
excessive use of force by security forces and abuses of human rights in the
post-election period undermined the corresponding positive aspects during the
pre-election campaign. As such, many aspects of the 2018 elections in Zimbabwe
failed to meet international standards.”
If the results are full of errors, cannot be traced, etc. and
the process failed to meet international standards for free, fair and credible
elections; it is clear the whole election process was null and void. The
election failed to produce a legitimate result and those claiming electoral
victory are illegitimate.
Instead of Nelson Chamisa and his MDC A friends accepting the
2018 elections failed to produce a legitimate government, they are cherry
picking. They have accept the parliamentary results and thus the process a
free, fair and credible although the result showed the same errors and lacked
traceability, etc and the process had the same flaws and illegalities.
What they are contesting is ZEC’s result giving Mnangagwa
more votes than Chamisa. Interesting enough, Chamisa has failed to produce the
verified voters’ roll, all the V11 forms (summary of the vote count at each
polling station), etc. In other words, Chamisa’s figures had the same
shortcomings as ZEC’s figures – could not be traced and verified.
What MDC A is hoping to achieve in its diplomatic offensive
is to get the British and the international community to accept that Chamisa is
the winner of the presidential race and help pressure Mnangagwa to step down
and Chamisa take over or the two share power.
No amount of diplomatic pressure will ever persuade the
international community to accept Chamisa as the winner of an election whose
result is full of errors and cannot trace and the process is flawed and
illegal.
The reason why MDC A are cherry picking, accepting the
election as free, fair and credible for everything except the presidential
result is simple – the party does not care that Zanu PF blatantly rigged the
elections denying the ordinary people a meaningful say in the governance of the
country as long as the MDC A got a fair share of the gravy train seats. The
party is pleased with the parliamentary and senatorial seats it won in last
July’s elections. The party is holding out on the presidential race in the hope
of putting Zanu PF under pressure to concede more gravy train seat.
Chamisa and his MDC A friends knew that without first
implementing the democratic reforms, Zanu PF would blatantly rig the elections.
They also knew that Zanu PF would be giving away a few gravy train seats as
bait to entice the opposition to participate in the elections regardless how
flawed and illegal the process happened to be. It was these seats that Chamisa
et al were after. And the party did win a number of these seats.
By failing to hold free, fair and credible elections
Mnangagwa has confirmed to the world that Zimbabwe was still a country ruled by
corrupt and vote rigging thugs. This had the effect of scaring away investors
and lenders alike and so the much hoped for economic recovery has never
happened. Indeed, the economic meltdown under Mugabe has got progressively
worse.
Chamisa and company are taking full advantage of the worsen
economic situation to pressure Mnangagwa to share power by insisting MDC A has
the “key to unlock his illegitimacy and the economic recovery”. All nonsense!
Zanu PF is illegitimate because last year’s election process was
flawed and illegal. The addition of Chamisa and one or two others into the
regime will not wipe away its illegitimacy. Legitimacy is derived from the
people in a free, fair and credible election and not traded away by corrupt
individuals like mango in the market.
The world knows that the 2008 to 2013 Zanu PF and MDC A GNU
failed to implement even one democratic reform in five years. A new GNU with
the same players will not do any better! And so investors and lenders are not
going to flood back into Zimbabwe just because Mnangagwa has added Chamisa and
Tendai Biti to his cabinet minister.
Last year’s elections were full of flaws and illegalities,
ZEC failed to produce something as basic as a verified voters’ roll, the whole
process was null and void. And with no legitimate government the nation should
have appointed an interim administration to implement the reforms to ensure the
fiasco of rigged elections is never repeated ever again.
Zanu PF should have been told in no uncertain terms that it
rigged the elections, it is illegitimate and must step down. By cherry picking
and accepting the parliamentary result as free, fair and credible MDC A have
given the illegitimate Zanu PF some modicum of credibility if not legitimacy.
“There is a crisis of legitimacy in Zimbabwe!” A crisis of
MDC A’s own making by accepting the flawed and illegal parliamentary result out
of greed and rejecting the presidential result to push for more power sharing concession
from Zanu PF. Zimbabwe’s national interests are best served by accepting Zanu
PF rigged last July’s elections and demand that the party steps down. No if,
not but and no time wasting political dialogue.
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