Skating on thin ice
The political transition initiated last year by the attacks on the Mujuru faction in Zanu PF leading to her dismissal from the post of Vice President and the appointment of Emmerson Mnangagwa as senior Vice President, is still underway but is very fragile. This fragility has several sources but in the main concerns the need for Mnangagwa to maintain momentum if he is to stay on top of the ice and not fall through.
One reason for the thinness of the ice and therefore the need for momentum is the fact that the underpinning foundations of the administration that is emerging are, to put it mildly, inadequate for the task at hand. This was no democratic transition to new leadership; it was in many ways a coup. The new team does not have democratic credentials and will therefore struggle to gain and maintain credibility with the international Community.
Another reason for the fragility is the presence of the "First Lady" of the land who has returned from a lengthy visit to the Far East and has been ill and who, based on her performance before the December 2014 Zanu PF Congress, is a destabilizing force capable of serious damage if she is not managed. The ability or even the willingness of the President to reign in his wife seems constrained and the suspicion exists that he somehow condones her activity.
Mr. Mugabe retains a great deal of power and authority in Zimbabwe, now bolstered by the fact that he is both Chairman of the SADC and the AU. Here he has constitutional authority and has sole signing powers on many issues, he cannot be ignored or bypassed and if he does not go along with the reform agenda that is required to keep on top of the ice we are all skating on, then the whole thing could collapse and sink.
Adding to this climate of uncertainly is the activity of the elements in the country that have been alienated and marginalized by the blitzkrieg carried out against Mrs. Mujuru in the second half of 2014. These must be controlled or managed and if not, then they have the capacity to destabilize the regime that is just taking shape. If not banished to outer Mongolia these elements could actually threaten our much vaunted and prized stability. That is a pity, but it is the harsh reality.