By Takura Zhangazha*
The inclusive government’s
draft constitution has now been gazetted and is due to be put to the people of
Zimbabwe for their assent or rejection on March 16 this year. The less than
four weeks that have been given for it to be distributed and debated by the
public are not only evidently inadequate
but can also be seriously viewed as a form of contempt for the peoples views on
the same document.
As such, debates over the
content of the draft constitution have been overtaken and come back full circle
to being more about the undemocratic nature of the process. Questions over and
about the inadequacy of a little over three weeks for the public to debate the
draft constitution have become common place and have led to some political
leaders in the inclusive government claiming the document as a compromise one
that will be amended by the political party that wins the harmonized elections
scheduled for later on in the year. The truth of the matter is that this short
time frame is a direct result of the undemocratic nature of the constitutional
reform process undertaken by COPAC and
as approved by the political party principals. And it is such developments that
should make it clear why it is necessary for Zimbabweans to reject the draft
constitution primarily on the basis of process with the added dimension of
content.
It is however necessary to
explain the full democratic import of voting against the draft constitution.
And this must be done in three parts, namely, understanding the historical
significance of constitutional reform in Zimbabwe, secondly, bringing political
leaders to full democratic account and thirdly understanding the generational
context to constitutional reform and democratisation processes in Zimbabwe.
To take an historical
perspective to constitutional reform in the first years it would be important
to dispel the false assertion by PM Tsvangirai and Professor Welshman Ncube
that the watershed ‘no vote’ in the year 2000 was a ‘mistake’. Such an assertion has been invoked once again
where and when they have discussed the current draft constitution. The reality
of the matter is that contrary to their assertions, the ‘no vote’ of 2000 was
the end result of both an undemocratic
constitutional reform process as well as an increasingly unpopular ruling
party, particularly as regards it's performance legitimacy within the context
of economic structural adjustment programmes.
That the two MDCs principals
wish to invoke revisionist history to cajole Zimbabweans to support their
undemocratic document is not necessarily a problem. But it would be fair to say
that their interpretation of the import of the February 2000 'no' vote is an
exercise in political dishonesty.
Historically post independence
constitutional reform has generally provided a platform through which
Zimbabweans have eagerly participated with the intention of making their
country governed better yet only to be treated as subjects through the
political dishonesty of government leaders of the day. It would therefore not
be remiss to state that the 2000 'no' vote was a declaration of intent by the
people of Zimbabwe, notwithstanding the different mainstream political
viewpoints, to make their voices heard. This is the same case in 2013, where
the people do sense a serious travesty of being asked to vote yes by a
political elite that has mistaken their popular support to mean unprincipled
acceptance by the masses of their every word and deed.
Where the politicians seek to
repeat their ahistorical mistake of largely
ignoring the views of the people in 2000 and acting as though they own
the country, the people of Zimbabwe must reassert their right to reject the
same said’s proposed draft constitution. This, not in order to wantonly repeat
history but to salvage democratic principle and ensure the entrenchment of the
understanding that Zimbabwe belongs to all of its citizens, not just the
political elite.
The second element that must
be considered in seeking to understand the democratic importance of the ‘no
vote’ is that where we can, we should never allow such casual and undemocratic
leadership of as important a process of wholesale constitutional reform to be
repeated.
This means that the no vote is
primarily about bringing to account on leaders who do not take such important
national political processes such as constitutional reform with the democratic
seriousness that it deserves. This is particularly so for the political (and in
some cases, civil society) leaders of this current undemocratic constitutional
reform process who failed their own tests of undertaking it on time, within a
reasonable budget or with the maximum possible public accountability. Against better advice, they forged ahead on a
partisan basis over a period of four years while missing the national and
historic significance of the process and simplistically banking on the assumed
infallibility of their party principals for short term political capital. Such
an elitist approach to a national issue/question must not
be permitted to occur without judgment of the people. And in this
instance the 2013 ‘no vote’ will serve to bring leaders to account.
The third and final
perspective that adds weight to the democratic importance of the no vote is
that of the generational question. And
it is one that must be viewed within the framework of the famous phrase
provided by African liberation war hero and thinker, Franz Fanon who once
wrote, ‘Each generation must discover its mission, fulfill it or betray it in
relative opacity’. This oft forgotten
phrase is one that in our context must be taken to mean that the 2013 no vote
is no longer about the political leaders of
either the liberation war or the second phase of post independence
democratization struggles (since 1997) who have been key players in the current
undemocratic process. Instead, the ‘no
vote’ is about the future, and not the past. It is a future that directly
affects younger Zimbabweans who must embrace a determinate course of making a
democratic history that is sensitive to not only social democratic values and
people driven processes, but also understands that their time too will one day
be up. And furthermore that they too will be judged on the basis of how their
actions and principles helped build or destroy a democratic future for
Zimbabwe.
And this begins in 2013 with a reaffirmation
of the democratic values that took generations preceding us to seek to better
the lives of all Zimbabweans, be it via the rejection of the Pearce Commission
or that of the one party state in 1989. This must and should be done through
exercising our right to reject what the inclusive government has dishonestly
referred to as a people driven constitution on referendum day, March 16, 2013.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here
in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com
No comments:
Post a Comment