ZIG Watch : Issue 17
Sokwanele Article: August 12th, 2010Reminder: Please send a blank email to survey@sokwanele.com to receive an auto-respond reply with information on how you can participate in Sokwanele's constitution survey. Alternatively, complete the survey online at www.sokwanele.com/zimbabweconstitution/survey

There has been little change on the Zimbabwean political landscape since our last Zimbabwe Inclusive Government Watch mailing. Certainly, the twenty one-month old Zimbabwean Global Political Agreement (GPA) produced little tangible progress through the month of June.
ZIG Watch : Issue 16
Sokwanele Article: June 22nd, 2010
The passage of another month has brought no change in the political stalemate facing the twenty-month old Zimbabwean Global Political Agreement (GPA).
To gain some insight as to why that stalemate still exists, eighty-two news articles from the internet media were captured and catalogued during the month of May. Each article is a unique record of a breach of the terms of the GPA. By categorising articles according to the nature of breach, basic statistics can be drawn from them.
ZIG Watch : Issue 15
Sokwanele Article: May 20th, 2010
- Share of breaches since start of ZIG Watch Project
Nineteen months on, the Zimbabwean Global Political Agreement (GPA) is still not fully implemented. A new political and economic order - promised by politicians - is still on a distant horizon, and the world media churns out a daily stream of articles describing a political landscape that closely resembles a warring battlefield.
It doesn’t take much to see where the problem lies. A simple analysis of the current state of the country can be done by capturing and cataloguing news articles about the country. For the month of April, a list of seventy-nine articles were selected from the internet media, with the criteria that they each represent a record of a unique event that details a breach of the terms of the GPA. They were then categorised according to nature of breach, and basic statistics drawn from them.
The results - from the month of April 2010 - are staggering. Twenty-two articles (27.8% of the total) detailed cases of violence, intimidation, hate speech and abductions, of which Zanu-PF were accountable for 90.9%. Cases of subversion of legal processes were second with seventeen articles (21.5% of the total), and harassment through the courts of MDC supporters and politicians came in third with 11 articles (13.9% of the total) - of which Zanu-PF was accountable for 100% of both cases. Summarising just these three most significant categories, Zanu-PF were accountable for 60.8% of breaches of the GPA that were recorded for this exercise. Space does not allow us to publish more details in this document, but suffice to say, the remaining 49.2% of breaches recorded are also almost all attributable to Zanu-PF.




















