The Struggle Continues

The Struggle Continues

If you live in Zimbabwe and only have access to the local media or even if
you live abroad or in South Africa, I would expect that you are very
confused about the MDC and the state of play in the country at large! About
the only thing that is straight forward is the fact that we are in a total
mess and the economy is in meltdown.

The reason for the confusion is quite clear – we (the MDC) are being

subjected to a total onslaught in the media driven by a variety of political

interests who are all committed to ensuring that the MDC does not win the

next election. It’s a long and convoluted story but I will try to summarise

and map out the essential elements to try and help you understand what is

going on and why.

The domestic agenda is the most easily understood. When Zanu PF accepted

that they faced an election in March 2008 and that this could not be

postponed as they had wanted to 2010 and on top of that they would be

required by regional leaders to put on a show for the world community that

they were able to organise a “free and fair” election, they went into high

gear..

As with most major developments in Zimbabwe, the planning and the final

decisions were taken by the Joint Operations Command (the JOC) and selected

senior Zanu PF functionaries. The strategy was quite simple – smash what was

left of the MDC and support minority elements in the opposition and

intensify Zanu PF/JOC political control of the rest of the country. This

involved tightening their grip on the rural areas and reducing the

population of the urban centers.

Since then we have seen a wholesale physical attack on the MDC leadership at

all levels, the systematic dismantling of MDC structures especially in the

rural areas and an intensified media blitz. This past week the MDC has been

headlines every day – all negative stories designed to show that the MDC is

divided, its leadership weak and indecisive and that we are incapable of

really effecting change.

While this has been going on, we have seen the renewed offensive on the

commercial farming industry and a new, dramatic and comprehensive assault on

the private sector in all other sectors of the economy. Through price

control and “indigenisation” initiatives what remains of the private sector

and the economy is being brought under Zanu control or liquidated. This is

being supported by the deliberate sabotage of urban essential services –

especially water. As a result they have started a tidal wave of migrants

into neighboring countries – especially South Africa and this is reducing

the urban population.

In this struggle inflation is accepted as one of the tools they have

available to them and they are determinedly driving the rate of inflation to

new record highs – it is a real possibility now that we will see rates as

high as those predicted by the IMF some months ago of 100 000 percent by

Christmas. To demonstrate that, the Reserve Bank is understood to be buying

foreign exchange on the parallel market and selling it to Zanu PF and State

linked individuals and companies at the official price.

We have not been able to buy seed maize for resale at all this winter. I now

understand that Zanu PF is distributing 5 kg packs in the rural areas – and

demanding that recipients hold Zanu PF cards. Maize meal is being

distributed in the same way – I heard on Friday of a Zanu PF office in

Borrowdale distributing maize meal to local people – I assume on the same

basis.

When it comes to the media and the State funded campaign against the MDC,

you have got to understand that this is directed only at the organisation to

which I belong and is led by Morgan Tsvangirai. As far as the media and the

CIO are concerned this is the enemy – there is no other. And they are right.

The latest polls indicate that there is only one real opposition grouping

capable of taking on Zanu PF and winning and only one individual who could

defeat Robert Mugabe and that is the MDC led by Tsvangirai. They know that

and have been working on that assumption since March.

So when we have an internal problem – such as the collapse of confidence in

the leadership of the Women’s Assembly of the MDC and the need to elect new

leadership, you can expect that we would be subjected to an intensified

campaign. We duly dissolved the Women’s Assembly leadership and held a

special Congress to elect new leadership. The Congress was eventually held –

after two last minute changes in venue following intelligence that the

meeting was to be disrupted and the delegates (from all Districts and

Provincial Leaderships) duly elected new leadership – pretty much

unanimously.

Under normal democratic conditions this would have gone by without much

controversy – but not in Zimbabwe. The headlines bellowed “Split Looms in

the MDC” and worse. We of course get no media time in Zimbabwe. The

newspapers are all to a lesser or greater extent hostile to us and the State

controlled media are just a propaganda arm of the State and Zanu PF. Who

hired busses to carry women and young people from all over the country to

try and gatecrash the Congress?

It is clear that the South African leadership have been hostile to the MDC

from day one. The reasons were the perceived threat that we posed

vicariously to the ANC alliance through Cosatu. Now that that falsehood has

been laid to rest, we are still viewed with some hostility in South Africa

and I have no doubt that some elements there would like to see a “reformed

Zanu PF” solution.

At the same time we have our domestic detractors who argue that the MDC does

not have the capacity to govern or that Morgan Tsvangirai does not have the

education or the characteristics required for national leadership. You all

know that I think this is twaddle and that Morgan has a sound track record

of achievement and management at national level. That aside – he is the

person in whom the Nation as a whole has invested its trust and he is the

only individual who can defeat Mugabe in an election today.

So we struggle on – preparing for an election campaign, continuing with the

negotiations for free and fair conditions – and believe me when I say that

the negotiations are often one against the rest, trying to contain the

effects of the Zanu PF and media campaign against us, coping with limited

resources as domestic business is terrified of being associated with us in

any way and major political donors who are committed to the democratic

struggle prevaricate. Trying to keep our people spirits up and believing

that the end is now in sight. Trying the force regional power brokers to act

when Zanu PF flagrantly violates the principles being negotiated and agreed

at the South African talks.

The talks in South Africa are almost concluded – 5 months later than

originally intended, the date for the elections is yet to be decided (there

is a lot of disinformation about the talks in local and international press)

and then we get into the issue of the transition and the management of the

election itself. Believe me, this is going to be a fight to the finish and

the outcome will depend on you and me. – Eddie Cross

Bulawayo, 5th November 2007

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