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Divisions
deepen as Zimbabwe crumbles
Stephanie Hanson, Council on Foreign Relations
October 30, 2007 http://www.cfr.org/publication/14665/divisions_deepen_as_zimbabwe_crumbles.html?
"We Know
Why You're in South Africa," reads a billboard in a South
African town near the Zimbabwe border posted by an underground pro-democracy
movement, "Life in Zimbabwe is Murder These Days" (Newsweek
Int'l). With government data reporting inflation at 7,600 percent
and international economists estimating it is much higher than that,
those Zimbabweans who haven't fled across the border spend
most of their time just trying to scrounge up basic goods. Some
supermarkets are spreading dog food on the meat shelves in an attempt
to hide the shortages, says an Economist reporter. Amid the economic
free fall, a deepening split in Zimbabwe's ruling party has
significant implications for presidential elections scheduled for
March 2008.
President Robert Mugabe
secured the endorsement of the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African
National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), to run for reelection
(SW Radio Africa). Yet some analysts see signs of a rift within
ZANU-PF. Former members of the Zimbabwe African People's Union,
which was incorporated into ZANU-PF in 1987, do not want Mugabe
to remain in power and are believed to support a faction led by
retired army commander General Solomon Mujuru (IWPR). ZANU-PF "will
go into the 2008 election campaign as a fundamentally wounded and
deeply divided party," writes the Zimbabwe Independent.
But the opposition
party isn't particularly strong either. The Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) is split into two factions, which could hinder its
ability to garner political support ahead of elections. In a recent
interview with CFR.org, Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the
MDC, downplayed his party's divisions, saying the party has
"reconsolidated." Even so, there are serious questions
about how free and fair elections will be. Voter registration was
low, there is no provision for the diaspora to vote, and political
violence has intimidated much of the population. The United States
has limited influence, writes CFR's Michelle D. Gavin in a
new Council
Special Report, so it should work to coordinate preparations
for a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe with the Southern Africa Development
Community (SADC), a regional body which does have leverage.
Much will hinge on the
outcome of the SADC-mediated talks currently under way between the
two parties. While some observers have expressed cautious optimism
(VOA) about their outcome, the opposition alleges that the government
is perpetrating political violence against its supporters. President
Mugabe denies (Herald) the charge.
Ambivalence also surrounds
South African President Thabo Mbeki, the mediator of the talks.
Though Mbeki has long drawn criticism for his policy of "quiet
diplomacy" toward Zimbabwe , there is little indication that
policy has shifted. Recently, some academics have drawn attention
to how South African businesses profit from Zimbabwe's economic
crisis. A new report from the Solidarity Peace Trust, a regional
human rights group, notes that such businesses have also pressured
the government to take a tougher line toward Zimbabwe, but it remains
unclear what effect such pressure (PDF) has had, if any.
With so many factors
at play, "Zimbabwe's political future is impossible
to predict," writes Gavin. But Mugabe's rule will eventually
end, and when it does, Zimbabwe will need billions to mount an economic
and political recovery. Gavin recommends that the United States,
along with other donors, establish a trust fund for Zimbabwe that
will be made available to a new government if it undertakes a set
of governance reforms. Such a policy could spur influential Zimbabweans
to action, but it would also give the United States the opportunity
to improve its "rocky" relationship with South Africa,
she writes.
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