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Zimbabwe: Referendum defeat for Mugabe shakes Zanu-PF government
By Barbara Slaughter and Stuart Nolan
22 February 2000
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Last week voters in Zimbabwe rejected the new constitution
being proposed by President Robert Mugabe and the Zimbabwe African
National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF). In a result that surprised
most commentators, the vote was 578,000 in favour of the new constitution
and 697,754 against. Turnout was low at just over 20 percent.
Voters in the cities, like Harare and Bulawayo, voted No by three
to one, whilst in the rural heartlands that were expected to vote
Yes there were widespread abstentions.
Mugabe has declared that he will "abide by the will of
the people". In an interview on the BBC, a spokesman for
Zanu-PF said of the Mugabe presidency, "He shall rule this
country for as long as he likes." But the vote was a huge
blow to the party that has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in
1980.
In recent years there has been widespread opposition to Mugabe's
authoritarian rule. Taking place in the run-up to parliamentary
elections in April, the No vote in the referendum has been widely
interpreted as a plebiscite on the Zanu-PF government and Mugabe's
leadership.
Zimbabwe faces an unprecedented economic and social crisis.
Unemployment is over 50 percent and inflation stands at 60 percent.
A fuel crisis is crippling industry and agriculture. Spending
on education and health has been slashed. In a situation where
at least one-quarter of the population is infected with HIV/Aids,
the cost of medical care nearly doubled last year. A report issued
in 1999 by the Central Statistical Office estimated that 76 percent
of Zimbabwe's population live in poverty, which is widespread
and severe, with a high degree of inequality, even by regional
standards".
In contrast to the suffering of the vast majority of Zimbabwe's
population, Mugabe recently awarded massive pay rises of up to
300 percent to MPs and cabinet ministers. Local headmen and tribal
chiefs, on whom his regime relies, were given even larger awards
of between 500 and 750 percent.
The result of the referendum was, however, greatly influenced
by external factors. Among Western governments and financial institutions
there is growing hostility to Mugabe's rule, and efforts to destabilise
his government or, at the very least, whip it into line. The International
Monetary Fund suspended funding for Zimbabwe in November last
year. All the major banks soon followed suit. Only US$34 million
of the US$193 million credit facility from the IMF has been extended
to the country so far.
Throughout the 1990s, Mugabe's government accepted IMF conditions,
restructuring the economy and attacking living standards by slashing
public spending. Last year the South African Mail and Guardian
described his fiscal policies as Thatcherite. The
paper said he was taking the IMF approved way out.
However the regime's corruption and nepotism acted as an impediment
to the interests of international investors and brought it into
increasing conflict with the IMF and Western governments. Zanu-PF
continually interfered with the activities of international corporations
bidding for contracts in Zimbabwe. In 1998 the Mail and Guardian
said the government was "usurping the powers of its tender
board regarding a huge digital telecomms project for Matabeleland,
a move which may have negative repercussions on international
donor funding for similar projects". In an article in the
February 16 Financial Times, Minister of State at the British
Foreign Office Peter Haine demanded a commitment to "sound
economic policies of modernisation of bloated, inefficient, state-owned
enterprises".
The IMF justified its suspension of funding on the grounds
that fiscal targets for the end of September had not been met,
i.e., the public expenditure cuts Mugabe had made were not deep
enough. Another reason given for the suspension of IMF funds was
the secret financing of Zimbabwe's intervention into the war in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), not declared to the
IMF. The IMF was trying to give an "ethical" cover for
its punitive actions against the Zimbabwean economy, despite the
fact that the most recent release of funds contained a clause
allowing Mugabe to spend an agreed amount of his budget on the
Congo war. The United States and British governments have also
attacked Zimbabwe's involvement in the war.
The war involves expenditure on 11,000 troops and is a huge
logistical operation. Mugabe intervened on behalf of Zimbabwean
business interests, who wanted to get control of the vast mining
operationsdiamonds, copper and cobaltin the DRC, and
to prevent the regional expansion of Ugandan influence. Initial
interventions by Rwanda and Uganda into the DRC were supported
by the United States and it is likely that Zimbabwe was encouraged
to intervene on behalf of the Kabila regime by British and French
business interests in the region. With the danger that the war
in the Congo could destabilise all of sub-Saharan Africa, however,
Western governments have backed a United Nations peace deal that
calls on Zimabawe and all other countries to withdraw.
Whilst official British policy has been increasingly vocal
against Mugabe and sympathetic to his opponents, there are still
powerful British interests close to his regime. Eighteen British
officers are employed in training the Zimbabwean army and it was
pressure from the British military that led to the recent delivery
of spare parts for the country's Hawk jets.
The constitution
The proposed constitutional change was Mugabe's authoritarian
response to the crisis facing his regime. Zanu-PF's propaganda
declared that the new constitution was a final break with colonialism.
Invoking Mugabe's national liberation credentials, they said that
the No voters were "sell-out Zimbabweans" who wanted
to retain a colonial-style constitution.
The main provision of the draft constitution was to strengthen
Mugabe's grip on the presidency. Under the present constitution
he should step down in two years time, when his current term expires.
The proposed change would have limited future presidents to two
terms, but as it was not retroactive, Mugabe could have stood
for another two terms. The draft constitution would also have
made his government and military officials immune from prosecution
for any illegal acts committed while in office.
Mugabe added a clause empowering the government to seize land
held by white farmers, demanding that the British government pay
compensation. This was a ploy to win the support of the rural
masses, whose land was stolen during the colonial era. The voters
did not believe him, however. Since independence, and despite
the enormous sacrifices made in the struggle against British colonial
rule, the land redistribution promised has not materialised. More
than 6 million black Zimbabweans are crowded into barren communal
areas. The few transfers that have taken place have gifted the
most fertile land to Zanu-PF officials and their relatives.
The government's Constitutional Commission presented draft
constitutional proposals to Mugabe at the end of November. But
it is indicative of the factionalism in Zanu-PF that even this
hand-picked body proposed Mugabe should step down and become a
"ceremonial president", with power passing to an elected
prime minister. A secret meeting held between the presiding judge
and Zanu-PF officials deleted the offending clause and inserted
one retaining Mugabe's executive powers. The doctored report,
presented to a full meeting of the Commission the following day,
was pushed through without a vote, leading to protests and threats
of resignation by some Commissioners.
Two Commissioners appealed to the High Court, in an attempt
to get the referendum delayed because of the alleged illegality
of the alterations to the draft. The presiding judge declared
that Mugabe had powers under the Referendums Act to make "any
corrections, clarifications, alterations or amendments to the
draft constitution he so wishes.... he could even have discarded
it completely and put his own draft before the electorate."
After the production of the draft, the Commission was legally
required to disband. Instead, Mugabe kept the Commissioners on
and transformed them into a campaign team for a Yes vote. Angry
crowds attended public meetings organised by the Commission, jeering
and booing the speakers. Some meetings ended in chaos. Chairman
of the Commission, Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku, attempted to address
a public meeting in Harare last Monday, but was driven out by
large, hostile crowds. Other meetings could not go ahead due to
mass hostility.
In his address to last December's Zanu-PF party congress, Mugabe's
spoke of behind-the-scenes "machinations" and "conspiracies".
He feared that the constitutional reform process, began as a bulwark
against the opposition and to protect the system of patronage,
was taking a different forma move against him from within
his own party. Debates in parliament degenerated into threats
between factions.
An article entitled "Contenders eye Mugabe's throne"
appeared in the Zimbabwe Independent. It claimed that confrontations
between "Zanu-PF heavyweights" were polarising politburo
meetings. Soon after, a Zanu-PF mini congress to re-elect
the politburo was postponed to prevent infighting before the April
general election.
These conflicts inside Zanu-PF are not about the path to a
"democratic Zimbabwe", but what new forms of political
rule can maintain the present regime. Mugabe is considered by
some to be the only force capable of holding the government together,
while others believe he is setting the stage for the party's downfall.
During the referendum campaign Mugabe utilised the colonial
Law & Order Maintenance Act, enacted under Ian Smith's repressive
white Rhodesian State. It has been used to break up demonstrations,
violently intimidate opposition meetings and arrest journalists
and opposition activists without charge.
The official opposition
Aside from dissenters within Zanu-PF, the main political opposition
facing Mugabethe forces he identifies as sell-out
Zimbabweansare those groups gathered around the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA). The NCA has claimed the referendum
vote as a victory for its anti-Mugabe stance.
Formed in 1997 to review the Zimbabwean constitution, the NCA
is a coalition of opposition parties, churches, Non-government
Organisations (NGOs) and the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions
(ZCTU). It represents those sections of the ruling elite in Zimbabwe
who fear that Zanu-PF is endangering their business interests.
Its political agenda is directly shaped by the demands of the
World Bank, the IMF and the Western powers.
It is significant that the NCA launched its constitutional
review the same year that the IMF first suspended loans to Zimbabwe
and demanded more "transparent government". This was
at the same time that the ZCTU leadership launched a series of
strikes and protests against the government and began to formulate
a pro-IMF programme with the employers' organisations. Calls for
an elected prime minister and the abolition of the president's
executive powers are made from the standpoint of establishing
"transparency" in governmenta euphemism most often
employed to ensure regimes are answerable to the demands of international
finance capital.
The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) was formed late last
year to oppose Zanu-PF in the upcoming parliamentary elections.
It is headed by Morgan Tsvangirai, ZCTU secretary general, and
Gibson Sibandi, ZCTU's national secretary. Both men were leaders
of the NCA and resigned to head the new party. Tsvangirai has
made clear that his organisation supports the "free market"
and the IMF's structural adjustment programme. His complaint is
only about the way the programme has been administered: "At
the stage we had reached, some form of structural adjustment was
needed. The general vote is thumbs down for structural adjustment.
But it's a failure of administration, not policy. It's a failure
of administration, not strategy. We had to relax and open up and
allow business to operate without these constraints."
According to leaked reports in the Zimbabwe Independent,
Tsvangirai has agreed that a "social contract" he is
proposing would contain a wage freeze, substantial increases in
productivity, the privatisation of state industries and price
increases on basic food stuffs. This is in marked contrast to
his populist declarations at ZCTU protest rallies against price
and fuel increases.
See Also:
Divisions in British government
over arms to Zimbabwe
[26 January 2000]
Zimbabwe
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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