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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SCCCO
statement on the withholding of Zimbabwe presidential election results
Swaziland Coalition of Concerned Civic Organizations
(SCCCO)
April 11, 2008
The Swaziland Coalition
of Concerned Civic Organization (SCCCO), a Coalition of Swaziland's
broad Civil Society organizations and NGO's, wishes to add
its voice to those who have rightly condemned the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission's (ZEC) withholding or refusal to release the Presidential
Election Results of 29 March, 2008 without just cause. We see this
action as one designed to provoke frustration and anger of the gallant
people of Zimbabwe to a point where, in desperation, they take the
law into their hands in a manner similar to the recent crisis in
Kenya wherein the election victory by the opposition was stolen
by the outgoing government of President Kibaki.
We therefore, call upon
the leaders of SADC, meeting at an emergency or holding an emergency
or crisis meeting in Lusaka, Zambia tomorrow, 12th April, 2008,
for them to call upon President Mugabe and his Associates in ZANU-PF
to allow the Zimbabwean Electoral Commission to release the Presidential
Election Results without any further delay and to allow the will
of the people of Zimbabwe to change their government through peaceful
means to succeed. We further call upon the leaders of SADC to tell
President Mugabe and his government to cease mobilizing party militias,
youth gangs, the security forces and the war veterans who are currently
terrorizing the innocent peace loving people of Zimbabwe and invading
white farmers, driving them out of their farms by way of intimidating
the voters against voting for the MDC should there be a need for
a re-run or run-off elections for the presidency.
The Swaziland Coalition
is also mindful of Swaziland's atrocious record of prematurely
pronouncing such fraudulent elections as free and fair that of Kenya
against a backdrop of withholding recognition of those elections
by the majority of the AU member states. We see this act by our
government as an act of misrepresenting the interests of the Swazi
citizens. We also condemn the actions of the SADC monitors, the
PAP monitors, as well as the AU monitors for prematurely pronouncing
the Zimbabwean Elections as having been "free and fair".
We consider the statements by these organs as representing a betrayal
of the trust by the Zimbabwean people of these structures. It is
our view that elections are not just the day voting is taking place,
but that the principle of Free and Fair takes into account all the
prevailing conditions months (and many months) before the election
date and during the election dates, including timeous release of
the election results. It is for this reason that we condemn the
actions by the abovementioned institutions of prematurely pronouncing
themselves even before all the election results have been released.
We take this opportunity
to salute the people of Zimbabwe for demonstrating restraint, under
extreme provocation by President Robert Mugabe and his associates,
to provoke them into taking the law into their hands as the people
of Kenya did recently, thus justifying a state of emergency, prolonging
his indefinite stay in power against the popular will of the people
of Zimbabwe.
It is clear to us that
by refusing to have the ZEC release the Presidential Election results,
President Robert Mugabe and his associates in ZANU-PF is hoping
to provoke the anger of the opposition, so that if they take to
the street in demand for the release of the election results, he
and his security forces may unleash a brutal crackdown on the Zimbabwe
citizens similar to the one he unleashed on 11th March, 2007, in
which his forces carried out mass arrests and severe beatings of
opposition leaders as well as leaders of civil society in which
one citizen was killed. This time around, we believe Robert Mugabe
wants to create a situation where in he can justify mass killings
similar to his crackdown of the 1980's in which his forces
and specialized trained militias massacred more than twenty thousand
(20 000) people in Matabeleland. We are saying Mugabe is still capable
of doing this and therefore calling upon the leaders of SADC, and
the AU as well as the International Community to stop Mugabe from
any further brutalization of the people of Zimbabwe.
To President Mugabe himself;
we would like to address his conscience (if he still has one) and
request him to ponder about the legacy he wants to leave. We, in
Swazi Civil Society would have liked to have remembered Robert Mugabe
as a leader who championed the liberation of Zimbabwe from Colonial
rule. We also would have wished to have remembered President Mugabe
as a leader of the then Frontline States which maintained a heroic
fight against the continued colonization of both Namibia and South
Africa by the then Apartheid Regime of South Africa. This is how
we would like to have remembered Robert Mugabe, not as a leader
that has destroyed his country and subjected his own people, for
whose freedom he and others laid down their lives to such inhumane
suffering in which the people of Zimbabwe are going through at the
moment. We call upon President Mugabe to ponder on this issues and
also to consider how his children should fit in a future democratic
Zimbabwe.
*Swaziland
Coalition of Concerned Civic Organizations: E-mail: sccco@mac.com
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