"Zanu and the Mutambara group simply do not know what to do. If they agree to do what the region wants, they are dead in the water." Eddie Cross writing on his blog on the 21st November 2009 asserting that the MDC M is deliberately delaying the finalisation of the GPA talks.
This is an outrageously false comment about the MDC M which bears no relation to the facts.
We all in MDC M want the GPA implemented urgently and fully. We fully supported what the region asked for. I personally had a lengthy discussion with President Kabila’s principal advisor Mr Ilunga Ngandu on the 3rd November 2009 impressing on him the need to attend to all of the outstanding issues. My colleagues have done the same. I have been present in Cabinet and know what has been said by all of us there. Arthur Mutambara’s statement made when the disengagement started is a matter of public record. Indeed it was Mutambara who clearly articulated for the first time that the SADC communiqué issued in the January 2009 could not be ignored, something Zanu PF was trying to do.
And as for the allegations that MDC M are responsible for the delays since
• That the MDC M returned home direct from the SADC Summit meeting held in Maputo,
• That the MDC M came back from
• On Monday 16 November 2009, the MDC M negotiators had to attend to government business in Brussels and in
The outstanding issues are not MDC T’s concern alone but those of the MDC M (we too want our Governor sworn in etc) and largely of the people of
Many commentators have expressed concern regarding the MDC M’s involvement in the talks and the GPA since July last year. They have expressed frustration with the fact that the MDC M controls the balance of power and bemoan the “Proportional-Representation-system-type result” of the March 2008 election which has led to this. They bemoan that a little party like the MDC M which only secured some 8% of the vote should exercise this disproportionate power.
The irony is that it is one of the BENEFITS of a PR system that little parties often hold the balance of power and in so doing prevent the tyranny of the majority – Zimbabwe has had a Westminster system for so long that it just does not know how to handle a “PR type result” which was produced by the Westminster system last year. A Westminster System, ie non PR system, does not usually produce this type of result. As we know to our detriment in Zimbabwe during the last 40 years the
I understand the frustration felt by some of my political friends in the MDC T when the MDC M has adopted an independent view in the talks. I have on occasions not agreed myself with some the stances adopted by my colleagues who have negotiated on behalf of the MDC M. But the fact remains that it has been as a result of those independent stances that deadlock in the talks has often been broken. It has often been as result of those independent stances that SADC leaders have realised that MDC T positions have had some merit and they have broken away from slavishly following the Zanu PF line.
One day people will begin to understand the critically important role that the MDC M has played since March 2008 in preventing
The statements issued last week by the MDC T and my old friend Eddie Cross are divisive. It just does not help our current situation to further divide. Scoring cheap political points does not help our nation. The statements issued last week are not only false but, more seriously, are destructive to the fragile process we are all in. Now is the time for statesmanship and conciliation if we are to move
By David Coltart,
MDC Senator.
David Coltart has been a human rights lawyer in