<<A Gift Today for a Vote Tomorrow Is Nothing Noble>>
NOBLE CAUSE: First Lady Esther Lungu meets PF women clubs in Mpika |
By Nyalubinge Ngwende
Zambia's First
lady Esther Lungu has been up and about the rutted terrain of the rural Zambia
trying to engage women, encouraging them to form clubs and distributing gifts.
At
the surface of it, the first lady’s traverses and engagements are a noble
cause. She is reaching out to constituents—rural women, who are left out in the
economic activities of the country. They need her support. Through her
initiative, they can get access to various resources that can help them to
embark on start-ups that supply the rural needs.
The
activities of Esther Lungu are not new to this country. These activities have been done by
previous first ladies. Vera, wife to President Frederick Chiluba had Hope
Foundation, Maureen, wife to President Levy Mwanawasa had Maureen Mwanawasa
Community Initiative and Tandiwe wife to President Rupiah Banda undertook an agriculture
and environmental related cause, while Dr Christine Kaseba wife to President
Michaela Sata ran Ubutala Wa-bumi (granary of health) project.
However, there are two perspectives to the work of first ladies that are nothing new and nothing strange. These causes carry both a noble cause, the heart of a woman to give, and obviously the subtle political campaign messages for their husbands.
Unfortunately,
the latter is the most effective, most emphasized, not deliberate, but because of
the nature of politics in Zambia and Africa as a whole. And it is that aspect
that builds into buying votes which motivates First Ladies to be seen to be
busy-bees, reaching out to the poor rural women. The best explanation is found
in the form that the African State, like that of Zambia, takes.
In
Africa a President is a whole powerful figure. It is a figure that takes on the
traditional attributes of a chief and modern bureaucracy rolled into one. All the
people, including opposition political parties, are subjects to the President.
Everything
good or bad that happens to the subjects revolves around the presidency. Those
who are loyal to the presidency, direct or through individuals and institutions
associated with this office, get rewarded while those who are defiant get
punished. Loyalty in this case means not having a different view point, even if
you have a more sensible thought, you are restrained to do so for fear of being
considered an outcast.
The
view point that one supports is sometimes symbolic. In the multiparty system,
among the rural poor, this would also mean the party campaign regalia one
chooses to wear or choose to wear none. For women clubs, if you wear the
chitenge for the ruling party, you are with them and, if you don’t, you are
without them.
The
opinion leaders who are in the fore front to encourage these groups are
political appointees—who are no other than the District Commissioners. The DCs
are intermediaries, working with party officials, to monitor the activities of
women and youth in the community and reward those who are toeing the party-line
and punish those who are active elsewhere or are just neutral. The intolerance is so huge for those who do
not conform.
First Lady donates to the needy at Kalilamoyo Village |
Therefore
it is around these principles of ‘we and them’ that the women political groups
disguised as development clubs have evolved. Whether the First Lady intends it
or not, at the end of the day the distribution of benefits to these groups tend
to be overly partisan, towards her husband’s political wishes—more electorates
associating with the ruling party.
It
is a crazy-list of clientelism that the presidency arranges from State House
down to the smallest unit of the community, including the ordinary man and woman
in the market place. Those who donate goods and services that the First lady
distributes in her noble cause are powerful people in business who do it for
business favours from the country’s first mansion.
The
only problem is that these activities evolve on short-term mentality that makes
the first mansion pay more to powerful business people for contracts which the
national budget can less afford, for rewards of less value goods that the First
Lady distributes to women in clubs in form of vary basic capital that hardly
helps to lift them out of poverty.
What
can a sewing machine meant to patch torn trousers and dresses really give to
women in the village? These are sewing machines and other basic equipment that
front companies to bigger multinationals from India and China donate to First
Ladies’ causes.
In
turn the multinationals demand huge contracts on which government leaders ran
around the corridors of the IMF and other lending institutions to borrow.
Gaining voting numbers is more important in the short-term as long as the
tenure of office lasts for the incumbent, than taking long term projects that
will empower women so that they are fully empowered to start making independent
decisions.
The
First Ladies initiatives in this country just do that. Dr Kaseba’s activities
could have been different and focused on the health of a woman and may not be
bundled with these less quality activities, but at the end of the day the whole
idea was to gain a positive image on behalf of the husband, President Sata
(MHSRIP).
It
is for this that no matter how President Lungu’s minders will try to defend
Esther’s women clubs movement as a noble cause, if one would link all the
activities: from the donations being received, the people paying for these
trips, the people joining in these trips and partisan conditions on which women
are being reached; it all boils to one thing—campaign for the husband.
Lastly,
the bottom line is that the First Lady’s Office has no line in the national
budget, but the State is still spending hugely on her. Think of the vehicles,
choppers and state machinery that are accompanying the First Lady and ministers
with her in terms of government money.
If
all the money were invested in a long term project to revive the pineapple
industry in Mwinilunga to standards of export, the country would gain and
distribute wealth other than poverty as it is the case at present.
It
is for this reason that Esther Lungu must sit down next time she returns to
State House and think to do something real noble.
NN
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