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Why
Zimbabwe is not Ukraine
The
Christain Science Monitor
April
05, 2005
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0405/p08s01-comv.html
A world away
from the White House, where President Bush Monday received the celebrated
leader of Ukraine's "orange revolution," a democratic reform party
in Africa faces a decidedly grimmer situation.
As in Ukraine
in 2004, Zimbabwe's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has just
emerged as the loser in what, to any objective observer, must be
considered a rigged election.
Africa, a continent
slowly climbing the democracy ladder, could use a Ukraine-like boost.
Yet, apart from the predetermined election and the yearnings of
a suppressed people, the ingredients that allowed peaceful, democratic
change in Ukraine are largely absent in Zimbabwe.
Viktor Yushchenko,
who suffered near-fatal dioxin poisoning in his campaign to unseat
Ukraine's corrupt and authoritarian president, had the support of
masses of protesters. But those were healthy, well-fed masses. In
Zimbabwe, half the country is on the verge of acute hunger, and
the official HIV infection rate is 27 percent.
Mr. Yushchenko
also had the backing of key institutions. The judiciary ruled in
favor of a new election, and Ukraine's security forces refused to
turn their guns on fellow citizens.
Zimbabwe's courts
have yet to take up the opposition's legal challenges to the 2002
election, and its leader has been quite willing to allow violence
against the opposition. Meanwhile, Zimbabwe has been given a whitewash
by election monitors and neighbors.
On Sunday, Morgan
Tsvangirai, the MDC leader, demanded new, fair parliamentary elections.
But he didn't say how this should happen. Can anyone blame him?
President Bush frequently cites Ukraine as an example for the world.
But for Zimbabwe, democratic change is not as easy as Ukraine made
it look.
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