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The
usual president looks set to run again
IRIN News
December 12, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75836
Zimbabwe's war veterans
are camped outside the conference hall of a critical congress of
the ruling ZANU-PF party this week, determined that President Robert
Mugabe, 83, stays in office until he retires.
Mugabe, who has led the
party since 1977, seemed on the ropes 12 months ago. Last year's
congress refused to endorse a resolution for him to remain in power
beyond the end of his term in 2008. Moreover, Zimbabwe's economic
and humanitarian crisis spelled electoral doom for ZANU-PF, and
his rivals knew that only with Mugabe gone would the international
community consider bailing the country out, analysts said.
But Mugabe seems to have
succeeded in turning the tables on internal dissent, led by wealthy,
regionally based political heavyweights, and analysts predict that
he will almost certainly be elected party leader and candidate in
next year's elections at the extraordinary congress this week.
Mugabe's political comeback
owes much to his alliance with the veterans and, more recently,
the party's youth and women's leagues. Immediately after last year's
congress the veterans began a campaign of pro-Mugabe "solidarity
marches" to mobilise local party support, culminating in a
"Million man and woman march" on 30 November in the capital,
Harare, which ZANU-PF politicians could not ignore.
"The war
veterans are being used to intimidate those opposed to the president,
and that is a sign that he is not wanted anymore by his colleagues
in the ruling party. They are an informal structure being used as
storm troopers," said Pedzisayi Ruhanya, programmes manager
of the pro-democracy civic group, Crisis
Coalition in Zimbabwe.
"We will oppose
all renegades and counter revolutionaries," chairman of the
veterans, Jabulani Sibanda, told IRIN. "We have confidence
in our leader and we believe the suffering being experienced is
to be expected, because he is reversing unfair economic structures,
which, in the past, benefited a few colonial settlers."
Zimbabwe is in its seventh
year of recession. It has the world's highest rate of inflation,
eight out of 10 people are unemployed, there are shortages of most
basics, from food to fuel, and the country's once impressive social
indicators seem stuck in reverse. Yet ZANU-PF, under Mugabe, will
head into elections, tentatively scheduled for March 2008, riding
high.
The chiefs in the countryside,
ZANU-PF's heartland, have remained loyal. They control their areas,
dispensing food aid, agricultural inputs and patronage - allegedly
on a partisan basis - and intimidation means that the main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has failed to effectively mobilise
in the rural areas.
The MDC is in disarray,
split into two main factions, and analysts argue that the likelihood
of voter apathy would boost ZANU-PF's electoral advantage.
Zimbabwe's unreformed
electoral machinery is also likely to work in the ruling party's
favour. A constitutional amendment agreed to by the MDC in September
has increased the number of constituencies from 120 to 210 elected
seats, but the electoral commission has gone ahead with delimitation
without the guarantees of impartiality that the MDC demanded.
Laws limiting public
assembly and free speech, described by human rights groups as undemocratic,
have not been repealed. "The main issue is that Mugabe is now
looking at self-preservation by dying in office, in order to avoid
being arraigned before international criminal courts," commented
Prof Gordon Chavunduka, former vice chancellor of the University
of Zimbabwe.
"But the issue is
much bigger than Mugabe," said the Crisis Coalition's Ruhanya.
"Even if Mugabe was replaced today, as long as the next leader
inherited the existing political structures, with a culture of violence
and intolerance, then we might create somebody even worse than Mugabe.
What is needed is a democratisation of all state institutions and
the political parties themselves."
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