Trust in the Transition
After 12 years of struggle, the transition of power from one generation to another and from one party to another is underway. The reasons are many, intensified pressure from the region, time, domestic pressures and serious divisions in the hierarchy of Zanu PF. The process is not reversible and the time table, relatively short.
But let's face facts; the transition would not be happening if the process was not accompanied by concessions and consensus. As these painful steps are taken, many observers express outage and worse at each step and we in the MDC have come in for our fair share of criticism. But such variances from the desired objectives are common to all such transitions. They were contained in the conditions under which Rhodesia became Zimbabwe in 1980 and under which South Africa became a democracy in 1994.
Where you have an entrenched minority, hold power through their military and financial control in the country concerned, then you require two essential elements when seeking to resolve the impasse: effective external pressure and influence; and, a negotiation process that can make the required agreements that will enable a peaceful transition.
In the case of Rhodesia it was not the pressure of the liberation armies, the Rhodesians were winning all the battles, it was South Africa who delivered the required pressure that the Rhodesians could not resist. In the case of South Africa, it was a threat from the UK Government, acting on behalf of the international Community, that basically made the stance of the entrenched minority in South Africa accept the changes.
But in both cases, all internal Parties to the process had to make concessions to the other to facilitate the needed changes. In our situation in Zimbabwe in 2012, it is the democratic forces that are trying to wrest power from another entrenched minority who hold the guns and the bank vaults. We also will have to make concessions in the process and people need to understand that.