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The
One Party State
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
Trevor Grundy in London. (Zimbabwe Elections Report No 02, 24-Jan-05)
January 24, 2004
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_002_3_eng.txt
When Robert
Mugabe was sworn in as the first prime minister of Zimbabwe in April
1980, a cousin and fellow freedom fighter James Chikerema said he
would never leave State House of his own free will. "Robert
will have to be carried out feet first," he told a group of
disbelieving foreign journalists.
As 5.6 million
Zimbabweans (total population 11.5 million) prepare to vote in the
country's fifth post-independence parliamentary election, the vast
majority - hungry, intimidated and nervous about their future -
would surely agree with Chikerema's words all those years
ago.
The late president
Julius Nyerere of Tanzania used to describe Zimbabwe as "the
jewel of Africa". But now more than 2,000 Zimbabweans die from
AIDS each week. Inflation is out of control, by far the world's
highest, having topped 600 per cent for a time. Unemployment is
approaching 80 per cent, manufacturing is almost non-existent and
agriculture has been virtually destroyed.
At some point,
under present policies, the country will simply implode. Most economic
experts agree that even if radical reforms are implemented by the
newly-elected government it will take Zimbabwe more than a decade
to return to economic levels that prevailed at independence in 1980.
Things are so
bad in what was once one of sub-Sahara's most vibrant economies
that people joke wryly, "What did we have before candles?"
The answer, "Electricity."
Against this
backdrop of catastrophic collapse, the ruling party is split from
top to bottom, cracking along ethnic and tribal lines.
The country's
main opposition group, the Movement for Democratic Change, MDC,
has expressed deep concern about the legitimacy of the approaching
elections.
MDC leaders
and human rights organisations say terror and abuse have swept a
country whose ageing leadership boasts that it has finally given
back to the people what they fought for during the 1972-1979 chimurenga
(war) against white rule in Rhodesia - the land.
When Zimbabweans
cast their votes in March they will do so in the certain knowledge
that the economic power of their old enemy - the white colonial
farmers who stole their land in the 1890s and went on to make Rhodesia
one of Africa's few agricultural success stories - has finally been
broken.
"The old
days have gone," said one of Robert Mugabe's few friends who
makes regular appearances on the BBC in London, the academic and
ruling Zanu PF (the Zimbawe African National Union- Patriotic Front)
activist George Shire, "Whatever happens next, the days of
white power in Zimbabwe can never return."
Because of that,
Mugabe, who turns 81 in February, really believes that his grateful
people will ignore their present appalling economic problems and
return his splintered but - to his mind - purified ruling party
for another five years.
"What we
are about to see is a cross between a quasi-mystical coronation
ritual and an African-style smelling out ceremony sanctifying those
at the top and exposing those at the bottom to the wrath of the
state," said veteran journalist Michael Hartnack in Harare.
The Zimbabwean
historian and journalist Lawrence Vambe adds with great sadness
in his voice, "Robert has betrayed almost every principle black
people ever fought for, lost their lives for, between 1972 and 1979
when more than 30,000 people were killed by the soldiers of the
Rhodesian Army. He has become the new Ian Smith - stubborn, opinionated,
isolated and remote from the day-to-day sufferings of ordinary men,
women and children. Yet, tragically, I know he will win this election."
One hundred
and twenty MPs will be returned to parliament in the March poll
- no precise date has yet been set. Mugabe is then allowed to appoint
another 30 people who have been, and will be again, ZANU PF loyalists.
Twenty are from civil society and ten are tribal chiefs.
Zanu PF needs
105 of the total 150 national assembly seats to be able to alter
the constitution, and MDC leaders believe Mugabe would then do everything
in his power in the weeks ahead to secure a de jure one party state.
His weapons
already include total control of the police, army and some 50,000
National Youth Service recruits, who are deployed much as the brownshirts
were in the early years of Adolf Hitler's rule, intimidating
and crushing extra-judicially - and frequently raping - any who
dare to criticise the president and ruling party.
Respect for
western-style democracy means nothing to Mugabe who delights in
America's latest description of his country as "an outpost
of tyranny".
His chosen role
today is to pose as the champion of Africa's long lost rights and
he does so with panache, brilliance and huge intelligence. In recent
weeks, the government has passed laws and implemented policies that
have substantially increased repression.
- Two electoral
laws became effective last week that entrench presidential control
of all aspects of the March elections with Mugabe able to appoint
all electoral commissioners.
- Another
bill about to be passed provides jail sentences up to ten years
for anyone convicted of publishing or passing on information deemed
to be " false or prejudicial to the state"
- A new press
law carries a two-year jail term for any journalist working in
the country without a government-issued licence.
- A newly
passed bill empowers the government to close any non-governmental
organisation or charity. It also bans human rights groups from
receiving foreign funding.
Mugabe has come
close to securing absolute power in the past. This time he might
pull it off and enshrine as part of his legacy the return of the
land to the people, offering the illusion of stability by fatally
weakening an opposition who, he asserts, are the "tea boys"
of British imperialism and neo-colonialism.
In 2000, the
MDC won 57 of the 120 parliamentary seats in a brief spell of opposition
optimism. Two years later, MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai came close
to winning the presidency - events that inspired Mugabe to trigger
massive land invasions of white-owned farms which have brought Zimbabwe
to its present plight but which enabled the president to reassert
his domination.
Over the next
few weeks, the MDC's gains seem likely to be reversed because
of the power that Mugabe has gained and his willingness to enforce
control by brute force. This, after all, is a man who once boasted
that he had "many degrees in violence" and warned his
main opponent, Tsvangirai, "Does he know where we come from?
If he comes that way we will blow him away like a fly."
There are now
an estimated 400,000 Zimbabweans living in self-imposed exile in
Britain. In South Africa, there are more than two million black
Zimbabweans in exile who, like their compatriots in Britain, will
not be permitted to vote in the election.
Many exiles
are from Matabeleland, Zimbabwe's western province, where more than
25,000 black civilians were slaughtered in the early 1980s by soldiers
of Mugabe's Praetorian Guard, the ruthless Fifth Brigade, which
had been specially trained in the Nyanga Mountains by North Korean
military instructors.
The Fifth Brigade's
instruction was to wipe out "dissidents" and other supporters
of Mugabe's biggest-ever rival for power, Joshua Nkomo.
In 1983, Nkomo
set a trend by first fleeing Zimbabwe for Botswana and then Britain
before coming to terms with Mugabe by disbanding his own party,
ZAPU (the Zimbabwe African Peoples Union), and folding it into Mugabe's
ruling, and increasingly all-powerful, ZANU, to form ZANU PF.
Some called
Nkomo the Father of Zimbabwean nationalism. Others said he was the
uncrowned King of Matabeleland.
"Today
Mugabe sees himself as some sort of Shona king or tribal chief,"
said Vambe, a fellow Shona. The Shona are Zimbabwe's majority tribal
group, in the north and east of the country, from which Mugabe's
guerrilla fighters drew their strength during the 1970s liberation
war.
A victory for
ZANU PF in the March 2005 election would extend Mugabe's uninterrupted
reign as head of state to nearly 30 years. There will be an installation
ceremony amounting almost to a royal coronation, with Mugabe draped
in a leopard skin while bearing a knobkerrie, the symbols of African
royalty. "In Zimbabwean culture, kings are only replaced when
they die," said Mugabe's anti-corruption minister, Didymus
Mutasa.
There are some
in Zimbabwe who deeply believe that this African despot - who despite
his age has amazing stores of energy and a formidable intellect,
which raises him well above the level of people who remain his loyal
sycophants - really wants to create a dynasty. Chikerema asserts
that Mugabe has ambitions for his own son, Robert Mugabe Jr, who
is now a teenager studying - as did his father - at a well funded
and highly respected Roman Catholic mission school.
"He so
adores Kim Il Sung and Third World leaders whose children follow
them into the hot seat of power," said Chikerema, who remembers
his relative in the 1930s as a moody child cattle herder who could
just suddenly "sulk and withdraw his herd from the others"
and drive them to secluded pastures.
His deepest
wish, say those who know him best, is to be acclaimed as the man
who really did return the long ago stolen land to his massively
grateful people, even though the hundreds of thousands of villagers
encouraged to take over the land in 2000 are now being evicted and
their huts burned to make way for top politicians, judges, soldiers
and policemen.
"This
election will just help to consolidate ZANU PF's authoritarian
rule in Zimbabwe," said professor Brian Raftopoulos, head
of the University of Zimbabwe's Institute of Development Studies.
"Mugabe has a cunning strategy, but it will not resolve the
fundamental issues around economic reconstruction and democratisation."
Before going
into his last battle against the Romans, Galgacus, Chief of the
Caledonians, described his enemies thus, "Pillagers of the
world, they have exhausted the land by their indiscriminate plunder.
East and west alike have failed to satisfy them. To robbery, butchery
and rapine, they give the lying name 'government'. They create a
desert and call it peace."
That might easily
be Tsvangirai describing Mugabe and Zanu PF on the eve of the country's
important 2005 parliamentary election, which is sadly predictable
in its outcome.
Author and broadcaster
Trevor Grundy lived and worked as a foreign correspondent in Zimbabwe
for Time magazine, Deutsche Welle Radio and The Scotsman from 1976
to 1996.
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