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Cracks
in the ZANU PF House
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
Extracted from Crisis in Zimbabwe Weekly Update
May 31-June 06, 2004
The Crisis Coalition
believes that the confusion in ZANU PF over the holding of its primary
elections is a microcosm of the lack of democratic and clear guidelines
in running transparent, free and fair elections that has been associated
with contemporary body polity in Zimbabwe.
The confusion
over ZANU PF primary elections started last December when Daniel
Shumba the ruling party’s chairman for Masvingo province declared
himself the candidate for Masvingo Central constituency for the
March 2005 Parliamentary elections.
This confusion
was intensified when the architect of Zimbabwe’s ruthless media
law, the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, Jonathan
Moyo, followed suit and declared himself the candidate for Tsholotsho.
But in a typical
circus stance President Robert Mugabe unexpectedly put an end to
this undemocratic wave and told the nation in a television interview
that the primary elections will be held just before or after the
party’s December Congress.
The point to
observe is that if the ruling party cannot hold transparent, free
and fair elections among its members, how then can it be entrusted
with administering a national election that involves the opposition.
ZANU
PF goes after its own
But
the political confusion in ZANU PF continues, this time with the
arrest in South Africa of business tycoon and a long time sympathiser
of the regime Mutumwa Mawere over allegations of prejudicing the
state of more than $300 billion through failure to submit foreign
currency declaration forms and externalisation of foreign currency.
It is now a
case of the ‘revolution devouring its children’ as happened during
the French Revolution in the 1790s when the likes of Robespierre
and Napoleon Bonaparte executed thousands of French citizens who
did not share their views of how France was to be governed.
In this week’s
The Financial Gazette publication Mawere miraculously realises that
Zimbabwe is a ‘den of lions and is not keen to not walk into it’.
It has dawned on him that Zimbabwe does not respect the rule of
law, something civil society has always said and called upon Zimbabweans
to fight against to reduce the current injustices taking place.
Mawere’s case
has shown the highest level of hypocrisy associated with the regime’s
bootlickers. It is unbelievable that a person of his stature had
dual citizenship despite his previous pontificating that he loved
Zimbabwe so much. He is now refusing to come to Zimbabwe to face
his alleged crimes and is a holder of a South African passport.
The Coalition
suspects that Mawere knows that if he comes to Zimbabwe he is likely
to spend more that two months in jail without being given bail because
of political interference. What it means is that Mawere has now
admitted the lack of due process in the administration of justice
in the country.
This brings
us back to the issue of having a democratic constitution where the
justice delivery system is fair and not selective. We should not
have one law for the politburo and another law for the rest of the
citizenry.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact sheet
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