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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Growing disillusionment with opposition, analysts
IRIN News
June 10, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47602
JOHANNESBURG
- Bitter divisions in the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) and a lack of visible leadership on the part of its civil
society partners are to blame for the failure of the recent stayaway
in Zimbabwe, political analysts said on Friday.
The public largely
ignored calls for a two-day work stoppage on Thursday and Friday
by the 'Broad Alliance', a grouping of civil society groups and
the MDC.
The alliance
hoped to demonstrate mass disapproval of the ongoing national 'clean-up
operation', in which thousands of illegal market stalls and homes
have been razed by police.
Political observers
said there had always been doubt that the stayaway would gather
broad support because of the heavy deployment of soldiers and paramilitary
police, but the extent of its failure was a sign that the public
had finally lost confidence in the ability of the opposition and
its alliance partners to rally opposition to President Robert Mugabe's
government.
Johannesburg-based
lawyer and activist Daniel Molokela told IRIN the failure was caused
by a lack of consultation, opposition from within by some members
of the alliance, and a lack of visible leadership leading the stayaway.
"For such mass
action there should be broad consultation with all Zimbabweans,
including those in the diaspora. There was none of that, just as
there was no visible leadership, apart from National Constituent
Assembly chairman Lovemore Madhuku," Molokela noted.
"People need
visible leadership, and they can only participate in the presence
of clear objectives and well-coordinated activities. This failure
will have catastrophic results for the future of public political
action in the country," said Molokela.
Mduduzi Mathuthu,
the editor of www.newzimbabwe.com,
a popular news website, said in an editorial, "The strategy adopted
by the Broad Alliance will backfire spectacularly, with disastrous
consequences for the opposition as a whole."
MDC leader Morgan
Tsvangirai denied that internal party divisions over whether or
not to join the mass action call were partly to blame for the failure
of the stayaway, but admitted that some members of the MDC, who
called for mass action immediately after the 31 March parliamentary
elections, had accused the party leadership of inaction.
"The frustrations
and differences of opinion have been misinterpreted as infighting,"
Tsvangirai told the weekly Zimbabwe Independent.
Apart from news
reports that three members of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions
were arrested in Bulawayo, the situation across the country remained
calm on Friday as most employees turned up for work.
Efforts to get
a comment from Madhuku were fruitless, but ZANU-PF political commissar
Elliot Manyika said the Broad Alliance was 'stillborn' and praised
Zimbabweans for showing political maturity by putting the interests
of the country first.
"The people
of Zimbabwe are mature enough to know that there is no credible
opposition that can lead this country. What we have is a disruptive
and immature group of very poor chancers," said Manyika. "ZANU-PF
is in charge of this country, and happy that Zimbabweans will always
refuse to be misled."
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