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Mugabe set to rule until 2010
IRIN News
December 14, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56746
HARARE - Moves to extend President Robert
Mugabe's tenure of office by two years are being seen by civil society
and opposition groups as a consequence of the messy presidential
succession battle being waged in the ruling ZANU-PF party.
At its annual conference this week in
the capital, Harare, ZANU-PF is expected to confer an extension
of office on the president - a post Mugabe, 82, has held since 1980,
when Zimbabwe gained independence from Britain. In his opening address
Mugabe warned delegates to keep their "hands off" the presidency.
"This thing about succession has become
a nightmare, and those who are involved in it should stop it now.
They should not be too ambitious, because there is no vacancy yet.
Let's stop debate on the succession issue for now," Mugabe said.
He told the gathering that one of his
deputies, vice-president Joseph Msika, had told him "some of the
people wanting my position now wish me dead."
The anticipated extension is viewed as
a strategy to marry parliamentary and presidential elections in
2010. Presidential elections are held every six years and parliamentary
elections every five years. The proposal would see the two elections
'harmonised' and held every five years. Several government officials
have said the rationale behind the possible electoral changes was
to reduce costs.
The Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition, an umbrella organisation for Zimbabwean
nongovernmental organisations (NGOs), dismissed the claim in a statement.
"The argument that ZANU-PF wants to synchronise presidential and
parliamentary polls as a way of saving tax-payers money does not
convince Zimbabweans, who know how the party has been abusing national
funds in the past 26 years," the coalition commented.
"It should be noted that in 1987, ZANU-PF
brought about the executive presidency ... without a referendum
to get the views of the citizens. What is about to happen, if not
resisted, is similar to that scenario, where the ruling party consults
itself and determines the destiny of millions of Zimbabweans without
their consent."
ZANU-PF has a two-thirds parliamentary
majority, which means the party can amend the constitution.
According to the coalition, "The ruling
party now wants to delay a constitutional poll in order to resolve
its succession wars. If the idea is to have both the presidential
and parliamentary polls together, why not cut the life of parliament
to 2008? It is our submission that ZANU-PF has no candidate to succeed
Robert Mugabe, hence, another reason for delaying the presidential
poll."
Mugabe's current term of office is scheduled
to end in 2008, while the current parliament runs until 2010. Mugabe
was quoted this week in the state-controlled newspaper, The Herald,
as saying, "actually, the suggestion to hold simultaneous elections
came from me earlier on. I think it is better to have the two [elections]
together."
Patrick Chinamasa, the justice minister,
told IRIN early this year that there were several alternatives to
harmonising presidential and parliamentary elections, including
cutting short the current parliamentary term from 2010 to 2008 and
holding both elections in 2008, or having presidential elections
in 2008, with the victor serving for just two years until 2010.
Another option was amending the constitution,
so that the victor in the 2008 presidential elections would serve
for seven years until 2015, and then synchronising parliamentary
and presidential elections.
Mugabe's exact date of departure from
office remains uncertain, more so after he told a Canadian television
network in an interview this week: "I will retire of course, someday,
but it all depends on the circumstances. I can't retire if my party
is going to be in shambles."
ZANU-PF spokesman Nathan Shamuyarira
told IRIN: "The issue of harmonising presidential and parliamentary
elections has generated a lot of interest but, as far as we are
concerned, it is not on the agenda. Though the merger of elections
is not on the agenda, it might end up being partly discussed if
provinces raise it in their conference reports." Eight of Zimbabwe's
10 provinces have already declared their support for a proposal
to extend Mugabe's time in office.
Gabriel Chaibva, of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), said such an eventuality would be unconstitutional.
"That is clearly illegal because there is no way ZANU-PF can give
Mugabe a two-year mandate to lead the country without consulting
the people through an election. What we need to do is to harness
all democratic forces, like the opposition, civic society, trade
unions and students, to oppose any attempts to give Mugabe an illegal
extra two years in power."
Reginald Matchaba-Hove, chairperson of
the Zimbabwe Election
Support Network (ZESN), an NGO that monitors electoral issues,
said the extension of Mugabe's power could not be decided by ZANU-PF.
"Such an important issue cannot be decided
by one political party alone. It has to be taken to a referendum,
or go through an exhaustive consultation exercise on why we need
to do that, and when it should be done."
Matchaba-Hove, like many political commentators,
said the impression created was that the ruling party was extending
Mugabe's stay in power because it needed more time to sort out its
succession problems.
Nelson Chamisa, spokesperson for the
anti-senate faction of the MDC, said in an interview with IRIN:
"We want elections yesterday, not tomorrow. ZANU-PF cannot hold
the nation at ransom because they have failed to identify a candidate
who can succeed Mugabe. We are going to actively resist any efforts
to clandestinely increase the shelf-life of an expired regime."
Mugabe conceded in his address that life
was difficult for ordinary Zimbabweans. "In the course of the year,
lots of hardships have come our way: the ever-increasing cost of
living, the soaring prices of basic commodities, the ill-advised
increases in school fees, the hyperinflationary environment and
the continuing fight against HIV and AIDS."
Zimbabwe's economy is in meltdown, with
inflation hovering around 1,000 percent - the highest in the world;
unemployment levels are above 70 percent; the industrial base has
contracted by a third since 2000; foreign currency is scarce; and
shortages of basic commodities, such as food, fuel and energy, have
become commonplace.
David Chimhini, president of the Zimbabwe
Civic Education Trust, an NGO advocating human rights, described
President Mugabe's latest position on succession as "unfortunate".
"There are contradictions in what he says," Chimhini told IRIN.
"On one hand, he is encouraging people to openly discuss the issue
of succession, but now he is making an about-turn to say no-one
should do so for as long as his term has not expired."
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