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Mugabe
plans to leave only in a hearse
Benedict Unendoro, Institute of War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
January 17, 2007
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A360565
ZIMBABWEAN President
Robert Mugabe's attempt to extend his hold on power until
2010 has sent shock waves through Zimbabwean industry and commerce
and, more significantly, galvanised opponents within his party.
At Mugabe's
ruling Zanu (PF) party conference on December 16-17 the president
tried to arm-twist his party into endorsing a motion that would
have seen him renege on his promise to step down from power at the
end of his current tenure next year.
In recent interviews
with both local and international media, Mugabe explained that he
wished to continue as the country's head of state and government
because it would be imprudent of him to step down while his party
was in what he described as a "shambles".
Although the
majority of delegates supported his move to remain at the helm for
at least another three years, meaning he would have been in power
for 30 years, he did not get the overwhelming endorsement he sought.
Only six out of 10 provinces supported the extension of his rule.
Instead of Mugabe
being crowned at the conference as state president until 2010, the
motion was referred back to the provinces for a decision later.
Ruling party
sources said there was intense behind-the-scenes manoeuvring to
stop Mugabe's extended power bid, with panic evident among
captains of industry and commerce as the drama unfolded.
The country
representative of a multinational auditing firm said many companies
had decided to scale down on their operations as a consequence of
Mugabe's declared ambitions. "It doesn't matter
that no resolution was made at the conference to extend Mugabe's
term," he said. "The mere attempt itself was shocking."
He said no multinational
company would be happy to keep pouring human and financial energy
into an economy facing more battering than ever before. "We
are scaling down our operations here and so will many companies,"
he said. "The idea is just to keep a token presence in anticipation
of better days."
He said many
companies were approaching his organisation for due diligence audits
to facilitate their partial exits from the country.
The giant London-based
Anglo American mining consortium, once the owner of 40% of Zimbabwe's
private sector, has almost totally liquidated its holdings. Mobil
and BP oil companies are removing their signs from petrol stations
throughout the country in what looks like preparation for their
planned exits.
"We're
dead," said Juliet Masiya, a Harare travel consultant. "He's
old and has nothing new to offer except continued disintegration."
Many industries
in Zimbabwe are working at only 30% capacity while thousands of
others have shut down completely. "We're going to see
huge disinvestments from Zimbabwe," said the auditing company
representative.
"Maybe
only the mining sector will survive, but even then only the big
companies that have poured in huge amounts of money into infrastructure
and other developments. Otherwise, the small miners are also going
to pack up."
But it is at
the political level that the drama is most riveting. "Mugabe's
promise that he would not leave office because Zanu (PF) is in a
shambles is shocking, to say the least," one senior party
official, a Mugabe-appointed provincial governor, said. "It
means Mugabe values the party ahead of the country. Everyone, including
in Zanu (PF), knows that Mugabe is at the epicentre of the political
crisis."
The main opposition
political party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), is in
disarray and has yet to make a powerful response to events at the
ruling party conference.
Powerful Zanu
(PF) politburo member and former commander of the army Solomon Mujuru
is spearheading the fight against Mugabe's continued stay
in power beyond next year.
Mujuru's
tentacles spread across industry and commerce in one of the biggest
business empires ever built in Zimbabwe. To protect the empire,
Mujuru — leader of Mugabe's pre-independence exiled
liberation army under the war name Rex Nhongo — wants his
wife, Vice-President Joyce Mujuru, to succeed Mugabe. But the possibility
of this happening would be diminished if Mugabe does not step down
next year.
In a rare show
of a common stance, the other faction in Zanu (PF), led by the wily
former head of intelligence, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has also come out
strongly, though somewhat more subtly, against Mugabe.
Sources say
the factions are clandestinely going for rapprochement. They are
agreed on the steps that have to be taken first before taking Mugabe
head-on.
The first step,
the sources say, would be to remove George Charamba, the powerful
public service secretary for information and Mugabe's spokesman.
Charamba single-handedly controls the state press. It is he, say
the Mujuru and Mnangagwa factions, who has to be disabled because
he is entirely responsible for whatever the dominant state-owned
newspapers, radio and television say about the political crisis.
The factions
also want to see the exit of the head of the much-feared Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO), Happyton Bonyongwe. Not only does
the CIO control a newspaper group, Mirror Newspapers, but Mugabe
has also militarised the spy agency so that he, as commander-in-chief
of the national army, has immense control over Bonyongwe, a former
military officer.
The third step
would be to remove the ambitious Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor
Gideon Gono, who has emerged as Mugabe's most important lieutenant
in the fight to remain in power. Gono has been ordered to print
inflationary money to finance his master's extended-power
project.
Mugabe's
plan is to "harmonise" the 2008 presidential election
and the 2010 parliamentary election into one single poll in 2010,
arguing that this would be simpler and cheaper. Few disagree with
the superficial logic. But key Zanu (PF) politicians argue that
Mugabe is trying to become president for life via the back door
of a term extension, finally leaving office only in a hearse.
Diplomats say
that the events at the party conference have opened an even darker
chapter for the people of Zimbabwe, who have already suffered enormously
since the country began its precipitous decline at the end of the
last decade of the 20th century.
They say that
soon the diplomatic community and the few states that still co-operate
with Zimbabwe will have no choice but to abandon the country.
Many commentators
fear Mugabe may be faced with a violent exit and the country subsequently
left in enormous turmoil.
These comments
are based on widespread discontent in the uniformed forces. Lower
ranks in the army and the police are among the poorest Zimbabweans.
Many have left the employ of the state but many, especially those
who live among civilians, have begun to openly voice their disillusionment.
The long-awaited
trigger may just be the levels of unashamed corruption among Mugabe's
lieutenants. Uncertain themselves about their future, government
and parastatal officials have increased their corrupt activities.
Recently, there
has been an upsurge in farm evictions in which senior government
officials are taking over the holdings of "new farmers"
— black peasants for whom once white-owned land was earmarked.
*Unendoro
writes for International War and Peace Reporting, a nonprofit media
organisation, from Harare
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