There is much more that the people of Zimbabwe demand and deserve in terms of both service delivery and democratic reforms. GPA managed to mitigate the appalling situation in which our nation found itself after a decade of failed policies and violent repression of the people’s will.But we have had our own frustrations arising mainly from the deliberate stalling of key reforms that would have set the base for a new and democratic Zimbabwe that is ready to take its rightful place among the family of nations. From the stabilization of the economy to breathing life into our schools and hospitals, the advantage of the transitional arrangement over the previous regime has been clear for all to see.
Over and above this, the past year did see
some modest gains in delivery to the people. The largest single investment in
the education sector since independence saw the distribution of 13 million
textbooks to all the 5 575 primary schools ensuring that every primary pupil
will have access to textbooks. The end of 2010 saw the economy poised for a
growth of 8,1 percent after we spent the previous 24 months concentrating on
stabilizing the economy.The Ministry of Economic Planning and
Development opened a one-stop shop that will enable prospective investors to
have their papers processed under one roof in less than 48 hours so that we
create jobs and expand our economy. Significant work has already begun to
rehabilitate national infrastructure. The dualisation of some major roads, the
fibre-optic link to Mutare and the commitment of resources through the fiscus
for major dams such as Mtshabezi is a departure from mere lip-service that has
been paid to some of these national projects over the years.
In addition, the constituency development
fund, where each constituency will receive $50 000, means that for the first
time, parliamentarians will have a chance to embark on major projects with the
direct input of their constituents. Ladies and Gentlemen, despite the
above-mentioned deliverables, the test of any administration is in its ability
to provide continuity in the manner in which it achieves a positive impact on
the lives of its citizens. In this respect, the latter months of this
Government cannot be viewed as a success. Within Government, we have seen increasing
polarisation as the starkly conflicting visions of the main political parties
lead to delay, deadlock or dispute over even the simplest of policies or reforms.
The nature of our government is such that there is both collaboration and
competition. Our Zanu PF colleagues concentrate more on competition than
collaboration, deliberately oblivious to the coalition government’s important
role to have a common vision, to build the economy, to improve the people’s
lives and to execute our mandate as spelt out in the GPA.
For Zanu PF, politics has no single rule
and their game is based on the need to retain power at all costs. The net
result is that the noble objectives of the coalition government have been
rendered impotent as our colleagues choose to prioritize power retention as
their key deliverable. In addition, the continued failure to implement even the
most simple of the 24 agreed issues of the Global Political Agreement shows
that inherent friction and lack of a shared vision will continue to haunt this
inclusive government. The capacity of
this administration to deliver is limited, not by time, but by the delay in the
implementation of those reforms that are essential if we are to see Zimbabwe
move forward to a new, legitimate government that directly reflects the will of
the people. Thus, the timing of the next elections is
not dictated by when, but under what conditions they will be held. And I want
to tell you today, that executive authority in this country is shared and the
President has no power to announce an election date without consulting the
Prime Minister. We have to agree on a date, having satisfied ourselves to the
existence of electoral conditions that will not produce another contested outcome.
Only when we have achieved the necessary conditions for a free, fair, credible
and legitimate election will the MDC consider giving its blessing and
participating in such a poll.
Key to achieving this is a new, biometric
voter’s roll, a stable and secure environment, a credible electoral body with a
non-partisan secretariat, a non-partisan public media, security sector reform
and a referendum on the new constitution. We cannot have an election before we
achieve these key milestones. We have seen in the past few months the
deployment of soldiers and armed vigilantes in the countryside to recreate the
terror of June 2008. We have heard treasonous talk from senior
officials in the police and in the army, all speaking against the freedom of
every Zimbabwean to elect new leaders of their choice in an atmosphere of peace
and security. The police, the army and the central intelligence organization
are all national security institutions created to protect the people of
Zimbabwe and not to harm them. Over the past two years, these institutions have
shown no evidence of reforming; they have failed to adjust to the realities of
an inclusive society by refusing to let go of their partisan attitude, which
has eroded national confidence at a time when the people want assurance of
their security well ahead of the next election.
They have shown no paradigm shift and have
deliberately defied the civilian authority in the country, even those that are
under the direct control of the Commander-In-Chief. Either the Commander-In-Chief is aware of
this or there is now a Third Force that has assumed control in this country
without the mandate of the people. The people of this country respect national
institutions, not individuals occupying positions in those institutions who
have the tendency of expressing personal opinions and pretending that they
represent the position of the institutions they control. We have seen the increase in hate speech
and unbridled propaganda particularly in the public media where those of us who
formed this inclusive government to better the lot of Zimbabweans are being
vilified every-day, notwithstanding the fact that we won an election in 2008.A
case in point is the violence that gripped Harare in the past few weeks.
Everyone knows that Zanu PF mobilised its
youths to take over foreign-owned shops in the city. But the public media have
gone into overdrive misleading the nation that the MDC was at the centre of
that violence. The public media have themselves become a threat to national
security by promoting hate, division and even genocide. Article 19 of the GPA is
clear on the role of the public media in this inclusive dispensation. It is
unfortunate that the public media have allowed one person, who is himself an
outstanding issue, to give direction to national newspapers to sabotage
government programmes and to vilify some principals of the inclusive
government.
The people of Zimbabwe deserve nothing
less. Indeed, they deserve to live under the same conditions, with the same
rights, the same security and the same opportunities as the most progressive
societies on our continent and abroad. To offer them anything less is an
insult. In this respect, I and my party remain
committed to championing the people’s rights, both inside and outside this government.
Ladies and gentlemen, for too long we have tried to accommodate the arrogant
attitude of Zanu PF within this administration. That is not our job. It is the
people who will ultimately judge them for their attitude and actions.
In the meantime, as the victors of the 2008
elections, we have a mandate from the people that we are determined to fulfil,
either with the assistance of our partners in government or despite their resistance.
This will not be an easy task, but in agreeing to form this inclusive
government, it is a task that I undertook to achieve. Naturally, I had hoped
that, having lost the elections, Zanu PF would be honest and sincere partners
and would realise that their methods, their propaganda and their policies of
self-enrichment at the expense of the people have no place in a New Zimbabwe.
From where we stand today, it is obvious
that we over-estimated them. We overestimated their capacity to respond to the
growing cacophony of Zimbabweans demanding real change in the country; ordinary
people demanding a break from the ruinous past in favour of a bright, beckoning
future. Zanu PF’s continued abuse of natural resources and national
institutions to further party political agendas – their willingness to unleash
violence against innocent Zimbabweans – and their stubborn refusal to allow
audits, investigations or exposure of their misuse and mismanagement of
Government is evidence of the struggle that confronts all of us who are
committed to delivering real, positive change to the people of Zimbabwe.
As party that shouts so loud about the
overwhelming success of the land reform programme, one would think that they
would welcome an impartial audit into the beneficiaries, impact and fairness of
such a scheme. And yet they shy away from any attempt to shine a light into the
dark crevices of their past activities. Whether it is on land, diamonds or
parastatals, Zanu PF does not want its record reviewed or exposed. Rather than investigating the findings of
the recent Public Service Audit, they are condemning the terms of reference –
because it has exposed their abuse of the Public Service – the ghost workers
that prevent us from increasing the civil servants’ salaries – the six thousand
employees contracted on one day by one ministry after the March 2008 elections
– and the many other instances of patronage and corruption exposed by the audit.
Similarly, their desperate grip on the state media and the national security
institutions illustrate a party that fears freedom; that fears the will of the
people.
A party
that knows that it does not have the legitimacy or support to stand and be
judged on its own merits. Ladies and Gentlemen, it is for these reasons that
the coming year will be an uphill struggle for the MDC, for the civil society,
for SADC and for the people as we strive to create a conducive environment for free
and fair elections. But, as we have witnessed so recently on
our own continent, parties that have lost the support of the people have no
guarantee that they can hang on to power indefinitely. The major lesson from
Tunisia and Egypt is the sanctity and eventual triumph of people power; the
lesson that the people’s day will come tomorrow, notwithstanding today’s
repression.
But unlike those countries, Zimbabwe
already has a transitional mechanism through which the people can express their
will, through which they can help shape the future they desire. This
transitional government provides us with the perfect opportunity to set the
ground rules for mutual respect and peace among all Zimbabweans, for
guaranteeing the people’s basic freedoms to engage in political activity and
for far-reaching democratic reforms that will ensure that the people’s will is
respected and upheld.
So the main agenda for 2011 is to support
the road-map to a free and fair election; a roadmap with clear benchmarks and
time-lines that will put in place mechanisms to ensure a legitimate and
credible poll. Join me in a national campaign, a regional campaign, and indeed
a global campaign to ensure that Zimbabwe holds a free and fair election. We
must see through the process of reform as enshrined in the GPA and call for
active participation by the guarantors of this agreement to ensure a free and
fair plebiscite.
It is my pledge to assist this process to
move forward; and I urge all of you to join me in this last mile of our
collective journey towards peace, security, dignity, freedom and prosperity. Join
me in standing and working with all the people as we strive towards our shared
vision of a New Zimbabwe and a new beginning. A Zimbabwe that encapsulates the principles of
human rights, democracy, equal economic opportunities, best labour practices,
concern for the environment and fighting the scourge of corruption. A Zimbabwe that seeks to empower its citizens by
utilising our natural resources to provide the best possible education and health
care.
A Zimbabwe
that allows each and every citizen to fulfil their full potential as business
leaders, owners, entrepreneurs, employers or employees. A Zimbabwe where such
potential is guaranteed through the rule of law, property rights, the right to
personal security and the absence of any persecution based on race, religion,
politics, gender or ethnic background. Building such a nation is possible and
is inevitable as the will of the people cannot be denied indefinitely, and
eventually true liberation and democracy will flourish and prosper. Let us
bravely march into 2011, aware of the challenges we face, committed to the
future we want and determined to overcome all obstacles to creating a nation
that provides a peaceful and prosperous future for all Zimbabweans for
generations to come.
The truth is that everyone recognises the
notable progress we have achieved. In spite of deliberate obstacles to progress
and development, we have at least managed to achieve relative peace and
stability as insurance for the future that we are investing in. That insurance
is the foundation stone that we are laying during this transition to ensure
that our collective future is guaranteed through a free and fair election. There
are many skeptics who see a dark future because of the current uncertainty and
unpredictability. But hope springs eternally in us; the frustrations of the
present moment cannot darken our common destiny. I have been outside the
country and engaged Zimbabweans in many parts of the world. All those Zimbabweans in the Diaspora are
desperate to find a future in the country of their birth.
Yes, our brothers, our sisters-indeed our
relatives in many parts of the world see their future in Zimbabwe and they are
desperate to come back home. Even those in the country, battered and bruised by
many years of repression and misgovernance, yearn for a future in a new
Zimbabwe, a future where fear and oppression will be replaced by hope and
progress. We may be army generals today, housewives,
politicians, chief executives, church leaders, businessmen, peasants or
informal traders; our binding philosophy must be to create a lasting and
positive legacy for the sake of our children and future generations.
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