/ 11 December 2009

Zanu-PF opens congress weaker, divided

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has bemoaned factionalism within his Zanu-PF party, saying internal divisions cost the party its parliamentary majority, state media said on Friday.

“Instead of organising against the opposition, we are sweating for support, not for the party, but for oneself,” Mugabe told party members ahead of their congress on Friday, according to the state-run
Herald newspaper.

“We should be able to admit that the election produced a result that left a huge dent on the party. We are responsible for the poor performance in the election last year,” he said.

Publicly, Zanu-PF remains steadfast in its support of
85-year-old Mugabe, who took the party’s helm 35 years ago, at the height of the guerrilla war against the white-minority Rhodesian regime.

Once revered for guiding Zimbabwe to independence in 1980, the party is now reviled as the architect of the country’s demise, after a decade of economic freefall and political violence.

“Zanu-PF will come out of the congress still limping,” said Takura Zhangazha, country director of the Media Institute of Southern Africa.

“They won’t come out with a pragmatic approach to revitalise the party,” he said.

After independence, Mugabe steadily grew the party’s power, but this year was forced into a unity government with his leading rival Morgan Tsvangirai, now the prime minister.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) forced Zanu-PF into the minority in Parliament for the first time in elections last year.

Tsvangirai also defeated Mugabe in the first round of the presidential race, but pulled out of the run-off as the nation descended into political unrest, which rights groups say was fuelled largely by Zanu-PF.

The party has been riven by internal squabbles over who should eventually succeed Mugabe, who has already been endorsed as the candidate in the next elections slated for 2013, when he will be 89-years-old.

But analysts say there’s no sign that the party is ready to tackle its challenges, much less turn around years of crisis that have left millions chronically dependent on foreign food aid.

The veteran leader is expected to officially open the congress on Friday. Officially the delegates are to discuss the state of the party, the unity government, work on a new Constitution and proposed media reforms.

In reality, little debate is expected, analysts said.

“There will be no noise during the congress, and there will be no meaningful debate,” said Lovemore Madhuku, chairperson of the pro-democracy group National Constitutional Assembly.

“Zanu-PF has been divided for some time,” he said, adding that it had been “weakened for some time”.

Mugabe played factions within the party off each other to maintain control, but he’s largely ignored the feud over his succession, which has only worsened tensions, Madhuku said.

“We have seen provincial chairmen resigning and that’s an indication that he is not in touch with what is happening in the party and on the ground.”

Takavafira Zhou, a political scientist at Masvingo State University, said the party is now suffering because it has never fostered a culture of debate and openess, leaving divisions to fester underground.

“Mugabe has built a cult personality in Zanu-PF,” Zhou said.

“The main problem is that the culture of debate is limited.

There are people who are aggrieved who will not be able to speak out.”

Opinion polls show that Zanu-PF will likely lose any new election, although the party retains significant support, especially in rural areas.

Zhou said the party divisions will make it even harder to win the next polls.

“The question is, are the losers prepared to accept defeat?” he said. “Knowing Znau-PF, it will most unlikely accept defeat.” – AFP