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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
A
new challenge to Mugabe
Alex Perry,
Time Magazine
February 22, 2008
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1716488,00.html?xid=feed-cnn-world
As he celebrated his
84th birthday last week, Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe may
have joined millions of his countrymen reflecting on the single
question that has come to dominate his 27-year rule: How long can
'Uncle Bob' go on?
Democracy will
not unseat him; the joint presidential and parliamentary election
scheduled for March 29 will be neither free nor fair. The Zimbabwean
army has orders to oversee the poll, while opposition politicians
remain at the mercy of the police, and journalists are still subject
to arrest. In fact, most Zimbabweans are too worried about finding
their next meal in a country where the official inflation
rate has passed 100,000% to concern themselves with challenging
one of Africa's most enduring strongmen. Still, recent weeks have
witnessed a series of events that suggest Mugabe is facing a concerted
challenge from what, to outsiders, will seem an unexpected quarter:
within his own Zanu PF party.
Earlier this
month, former finance minister and Zanu PF stalwart Simba Makoni
announced
he would stand against Mugabe in the poll. Makoni is an unknown
quantity: in office he had a reputation as a technocrat who tended
toward moderation and pragmatism, but one who was also a fully paid-up
member of the Mugabe machine. But the significance of Makoni lies
less in what he is than in what he represents - a split in the ruling
party. "There is a sense that this is a real opportunity,"
says Elizabeth Sidiropoulos, national director of the South African
Institute of International Affairs, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
"Mugabe's position is really being threatened." Lack of
transparency and of a free press inside Zimbabwe has made it hard
to pinpoint the direction of Zanu PF and, just as significantly,
which party power brokers might be backing Makoni, she says, but
"it appears as though a split is happening before our eyes."
Nor is Makoni's the only challenge to Mugabe. Sidiropoulos and Chris
Maroleng of the Institute for Security Studies, also in Johannesburg,
confirm reports from inside Zimbabwe that scores of Zanu PF members
are standing as independents against their party's official candidates.
"With a weak opposition, the best chance for change is a reconstituted
Zanu PF," says Maroleng. "This election shows that there
is significant indiscipline and disarray with the party, and efforts
being made to achieve precisely that."
Maroleng says he has
been told that leading Zanu PF figures such as former defense chief
General Solomon Mujuru, former home minister Dumiso Dabengwa, and
General Vitalis Zvinavashe, who succeeded Mujuru, are backing Makoni
and the renegade Zanu PF candidates. (There has been no official
announcement.) Arthur Mutambara, leader of a faction of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (M.D.C.) has also endorsed Makoni's
bid, while Mutambara's M.D.C. rival Morgan Tsvangirai, who initially
dismissed the former finance minister as "old wine in a new
bottle," will meet Makoni to discuss a possible alliance, according
to a report in the Harare-based Zimbabwe Independent on Friday.
The reason for rising
discontent inside Zanu PF is not hard to guess. Not even their exalted
status in Mugabe's machine can protect the Zanu PF leaders from
the ravages of an economy that is collapsing as fast as any in history.
Last week the government announced inflation had breached 100,000%,
up from 66,000% in December. Industry, agriculture and the service
sector have all but ceased to exist. Shops stock no food, and power
cuts last for days. Between a quarter and a third of Zimbabwe's
original population of 13 million are believed to have fled the
country, the majority for neighboring South Africa. The only functioning
part of the country is the security apparatus, but, aside from Mugabe's
bodyguards, even that is now questionable, with consistent reports
of no pay, sporadic mutinies and the apparent allying of some heavyweight
military figures against Mugabe. "These guys have a bottom
line," says Marengo, "and Mugabe is increasingly seen
as an economic liability."
Few, however, discount
Mugabe's shrewdness or his capacity for survival after 27 years
in power. "With the implosion on his party," says Marengo,
"Mugabe will continue to rely on the security establishment
to ensure all decisions are done in his interest. He will resort
to extra-legal measures. And given his history, you have to say
that it is highly unlikely that Makoni will win." Nevertheless,
the result will be keenly watched.
"People will make
their moves based on the result," says Marengo. One key factor
could be the degree to which the security services rig the vote,
as normal, or the countervailing influence of Makoni, Mujuru and
others can persuade them to stand aside. The London-based Zimbabwean
newspaper even published a front-page story on Thursday detailing
what it said was Mugabe's contingency plan to flee the country should
his position become untenable after the poll. But most analysts
agree such reports are more wishful thinking than fact. South African
government and Zimbabwean opposition sources claim it is true, however,
that the question of Mugabe's retirement - and a deal giving him
immunity from prosecution for war crimes and genocide over the Matabeleland
massacres of the
1980s - has long been high on the agenda of mediation
talks, led by South African President Thabo Mbeki, between Mugabe's
regime and Zimbabwe's opposition. "It's been a long, long beginning
to the end," says Sidiropoulos, "and the lesson is: never
underestimate the power of fear in totalitarian regimes. But the
point remains: if you are able to remove Mugabe, however it happens,
then that creates an opening for a return to normality."
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