Woza Moya – English – February 2008

STAND UP FOR YOUR CHILD
Participate in reclaiming our country’s future

The election date has been announced for 29 March 2008 and we know that now is the time candidates will be coming to us making all kinds of promises to make us vote for them. It is also the time when people realise that they have the chance to decide who will lead our country. WOZA wants you to realise that now is also the time when you should be seriously looking at what the future holds for the next generation. When you read this newsletter, please sit down and think about your child and the dreams you had of a better life for them. Look around you at what your children are doing. Are they in school studying hard and doing well or sleeping on their desks without teachers? Are they queuing at the boreholes or in the bush looking for firewood? Or far away in a foreign land? Is this the future you imagined for them?

YOUR CHILD EXPECTS YOU TO CHANGE THIS BY TAKING FOUR STEPS
1.    Register to vote and check that your name appears on the voters roll.
2.    Attend any rally that you can and ask questions of the candidates, so you can be sure you will vote wisely.
3.    Get up early on 29 March 2008 and go and vote. There are many candidates in this election and we recommend that you vote for a candidate rather than a party. If we do not have independent observers; a proper delimitation process; vote counting and announcement directly from the polling station, then the election process is flawed and can easily be rigged so we must all be vigilant and watch out for those who cheat.
4.    Defend your vote from the time you cast it until it is counted and announced. Just the same way you defend your child, you should defend your vote.

We are disappointed that the election date has been made without our 10 steps and hope that we will vote for someone who will address these steps within 100 days of office.

1.    Violence, in all its forms, must be stopped to allow for a period of healing, peace and justice.
2.    The winners of the election should convene an all-stakeholders’ conference with the following participants: all political parties, non-governmental organisation, churches, labour, business, youth and women all meeting on an equal basis.  Their agenda is to devise a programme for peace and development using the PEOPLE model – People for Economic Opportunity, Peace, Learning and Empowerment
3.    They should also constitute an All-Stakeholders’ Commission with the mandate to outline a process of constitution making. Initiate a constitution-making process, including a plan for transitional justice, consulting all Zimbabweans both at home and abroad.
4.    Having assumed legislative power, they should repeal oppressive legislation against freedom of expression and assembly such as the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) and Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). An end to the selective application of other laws.
5.    Conduct an audit of civil servants, the judiciary and law enforcement agents as to their professional and non-partisan conduct. Offenders should be sent to re-training/community service or for prosecution. The youth militia should be disbanded and the defence forces should be confined to barracks for retraining.
6.    Begin the process of re-engaging the international community with a view to rehabilitating the economy aimed at job creation.
7.    Carry out a land audit to lay the basis for a permanent and equitable solution to land reform, while promoting immediate resumption of food production.
8.    Take the resulting constitutional and transitional justice proposals to a referendum supervised by Southern African Development Community (SADC). Ensure the referendum has been conducted according to the SADC protocols and under international and regional supervision with international and local observers.
9.    Prepare for the referendum, including reconstituting the Registrar General’s department, preparing new electoral laws, appointing an independent electoral commission and delimitation commission to prepare an electoral roll and prepare for the election.
10.

On Valentine’s Day, WOZA march for Bread and Roses – bread representing the need for affordable food and the roses representing dignity and the call for social justice.  In 2008, nothing has changed. We still need to afford to eat and we still desire a dignified and good life – a life where we can enjoy social justice, a life that we have outlined in the People’s Charter.

Social justice can be defined as a system where people have equal opportunities/access to social, economic, cultural, religious and political needs regardless of race, gender, creed or any other form of discrimination.

It can be the way we interact with others and a method of governance that includes the following:
·    Full enjoyment of all social, political, economic and cultural rights
·    An equal society including gender equality
·    Respect for human rights including women’s and children’s rights
·    Freedoms including speech, assembly and association
·    Respect and tolerance of diversity – culture and religion
·    Transparency and accountability
·    Equal participation in political and economic decision-making
·    Equal application of the law – access to justice and understanding of the law
·    Correction of past injustices such as Gukurahundi and Murambatsvina
·    Gutsaruzhinji/inhlalakahle yabantu (Good living)
·    Access to affordable education
·    Adequate and affordable food
·    Access to affordable housing, electricity, sanitation and clean water
·    Access to affordable healthcare and medication including anti-retrovirals (ARVs)
·    Equal and fair access to fertile land, inputs, equipment and secure ownership
·    Equal opportunities to resources, employment, self-help projects and the right to earn a living wage
·    Development of adequate infrastructure and access to affordable transport
·    Environmentally sustainable usage of resources

As Zimbabweans we deserve the social justice that we talk about but we can only get it if we are prepared to stand up and demand it from our leaders. Make a start today.

 

Stand up for your child’s future.