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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwean
government mobilizes machinery as elections near
Darren Taylor, Voice of America (VOA)
March 20, 2008
View story on
VOA News website
Supporters of Zimbabwean
president Robert Mugabe are doing all they can to ensure that he
wins re-election next Saturday (March 29). The 84-year-old Mr. Mugabe
has led Zimbabwe since 1980. Now he faces challenges from opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai and former finance minister Simba Makoni.
Mr. Mugabe wants to take 51 per cent of the vote, to avoid a run-off
against either of his rivals. Many international observers are predicting
that the ballot will not be free and fair. President Mugabe and
his ruling ZANU-PF party stand accused of rigging previous elections.
In the build-up to the polls, Mr. Mugabe's security forces have
again been arresting and assaulting opposition supporters. In the
fourth of our series on the Zimbabwe elections, VOA's Darren Taylor
examines the state of the ruling party.
President Mugabe has
presided over the worst economic crisis in Zimbabwe's history. There
are food and fuel shortages, mass unemployment and the highest inflation
rate in the world. Mr. Mugabe, though, remains a hero to millions
of Africans and much admired in the developing world for his anti-Western
views. In the 1970s, he fought a war of liberation against the white
minority Rhodesian government and won independence for his people.
After he took office
in 1980, Mr. Mugabe preached reconciliation, and economic reforms
led to sustained growth. The country's agriculture sector boomed,
with Zimbabwe becoming a regional breadbasket. But the country is
now a net importer of food, and agriculture has collapsed. President
Mugabe blames the situation on persistent drought. But many analysts
trace Zimbabwe's agricultural implosion back to his land reform
program: in 2000 the government began seizing farms owned by white
Zimbabweans for what it said was "redistribution to landless
blacks." Yet in many cases, the land went to Mr. Mugabe's allies
in the ruling party.
It is for reasons such
as these that he commands a loyal and boisterous following from
Zimbabwe's army and police, former liberation war veterans and the
much-feared ZANU-PF youth militia.
President Mugabe also
blames the food shortages, high unemployment and skyrocketing inflation
on Western sanctions - even though the United States, European Union
and others have not instituted economic sanctions against Zimbabwe.
These countries have, however, launched "targeted" sanctions
against individuals in Zimbabwe, by means of which Mr. Mugabe and
other senior ruling party members are banned from traveling to America
and certain parts of Europe and their assets there have been seized.
ZANU-PF
"at its weakest"
Leading
up to the March 29 ballot, analysts say the ZANU-PF campaign has
been in relative disarray.
"For the simple
reason that when all the social indicators in the country are negative,
what is ZANU-PF trying to sell to the electorate? They have ruined
the economy; there are (power) outages; there is no water, no sanitation;
(there's) hunger, poverty. What message are they going to sell to
the electorate? On what basis would Mugabe seek re-election from
the people of Zimbabwe?" asks Sydney Masamvu, a Zimbabwean
analsyst with the International Crisis Group.
As the election nears,
there've been reports of ZANU-PF candidates being imposed on constituencies
and of individuals openly defying the party and registering themselves
as candidates in the municipal and parliamentary polls that'll be
held on the same day as the presidential ballot.
In addition, some ZANU-PF
members have been abandoning the party to join their one-time colleague,
former finance minister Simba Makoni, who has broken ranks to oppose
President Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
"More than anything
else, the entrance of Makoni into the race has resulted in paranoia
and panic in ZANU-PF ranks," Masamvu contends.
Blessing Zulu, a journalist
with VOA's Studio 7 Zimbabwe Service, agrees. He says, "They
(ZANU-PF) don't know who is really supporting them and who is not.
So what they've resorted to saying is that every parliamentary candidate,
councilor or senator, before they start campaigning, they first
have to tell the electorate to vote for President Robert Mugabe,
as a way of ensuring that Mugabe does not lose this election."
The president himself,
though, is seemingly undeterred. He has promised a "landslide
victory" to "shame" his critics in the international
community. He is supremely confident of winning another five-year
term.
But Briggs Bomba, a former
student activist in Zimbabwe now working for the Africa Action lobby
group in Washington, D.C., says despite the "bravado"
that Mugabe is exuding - which includes branding his opponents "witches,"
"charlatans," "two headed creatures" and "prostitutes"
- the president clearly feels threatened ahead of the polls.
"ZANU-PF is at its
weakest at the present moment.. That's why it's not given that they'll
take the election now (if it's free and fair). Every other time
we've sort of known: Oh, Mugabe is (going to be) winning."
Bomba attributes
this state of affairs to "the Makoni factor" and the fact
that other senior ruling party members, such as former Interior
Minister Dumiso Dabengwa, have switched allegiances from Mugabe
to Makoni, causing uncertainty in the ruling party ranks.
Masamvu
concurs: "I think when you see people like Dumiso coming out
(against Mugabe), it's a very strong signal that ZANU-PF is imploding;
that ZANU-PF will never be the same again. It's disintegrating."
Dabengwa is highly respected
in Zimbabwe. He's a liberation war hero who commanded guerrilla
fighters during the country's bush war, before being jailed without
trial by Mr. Mugabe in post-independent Zimbabwe.
Dabengwa maintains there
are other senior ruling party officials who are supporting Makoni
against president Mugabe - albeit secretly at this stage.
Last December, discord
was sown in ZANU-PF when Mr. Mugabe subverted the party's constitution
to avoid a challenge to his leadership. This, says Makoni, resulted
in the ruling party congress merely "rubberstamping" yet
another presidential term for Mr. Mugabe.
"We also saw other
sections of the war veteran element - some of them quite senior
- breaking ranks away (from the president) and joining Makoni's
camp. In Bulawayo, there are reports that the army and certain sections
of the police were clandestinely throwing out some fliers for the
Makoni campaign," says Bomba.
Michelle Gavin, of the
United States' Council on Foreign Relations, and author of the group's
Special Report on Zimbabwe, says there's "long been a power
struggle" between various factions within ZANU-PF - "different
elements of the party who recognise that continuing to go on the
way they've been doing in recent years isn't really in their best
interests. They have significant holdings and investments, and at
a certain point, this economic collapse - that's been very lucrative
for some in the inner circle - starts to threaten the long-term
outlook of these investments. So there's been a kind of jockeying
for position and unrest in the ruling party for quite some time."
She says, though, that
despite all the talk of "Mugabe in crisis" and "ZANU-PF
dissolving," Mr. Mugabe is a great survivor.
"President Mugabe's
always been very effective in being able to divide and conquer,
to keep each faction off balance."
Mugabe to try to avert
"embarrassment"
Under revamped electoral
rules, a candidate must win 51 per cent of the vote in order to
be declared an outright winner - unlike in the past, when a simple
majority sufficed to ensure victory. If he fails to secure this,
then he'll face a run-off - to be held 21 days after the ballot
- against the candidate who secures second place in the popular
polling.
Bomba comments, "For
Mugabe, he wants to avoid the embarrassment of a run-off, so I'm
sure he's going to use his machinery to ensure that the constituency
that will vote for him turns out in record numbers. So I'm sure
the villages, the rural areas, are going to be whipped massively
so that they turn out very massively. The question that is not clear
at the moment is whether the opposition will have a similar strategy
to bring out the urban electorate which is traditionally loyal to
the opposition, so that it turns out in equally record numbers."
But analysts concede
that both Tsvangirai and Makoni face a far more daunting task in
motivating support than Mugabe does.
"It's difficult
for them to do, because they don't have access to state resources.
Previous elections have seen army trucks taking Mugabe supporters
to the polls, for example," says Masamvu.
But the analyst remains
confident that there will indeed be a run-off: "When you have
three strong candidates it will need a fairly efficient and sophisticated
rigging machinery for Mugabe to garner the 51 per cent of the votes
(he needs to gain an outright victory).. We are likely to see that
the three-way context will cause a split after the first round of
voting, and then there will be a run-off between Mugabe and either
Makoni or Tsvangirai, with the candidate who finished third supporting
his former opponent against Mugabe."
Speaking from Harare,
M.D.C. supporter Janet Gono told VOA, "We're hoping that the
outcome of the election will trigger a run-off which will force
all the opposition forces to come together. This can only be a good
thing for Zimbabweans. Then we will celebrate, no matter what, because
hope will be renewed."
International and local
analysts, though, still can't foresee a Mugabe defeat in a run-off.
ZANU-PF
mobilizing its machinery
Bomba
says ZANU-PF is "not sleeping right now, trying to ensure that
they tightly secure their strongholds and whip up people through
coercion and also through this patronage system that they've always
had - these handouts that always come out during election time -
to ensure that especially the rural vote comes out for Mugabe."
Zulu says almost 80 per
cent of Zimbabwe's population lives in the rural areas, "and
that is President Mugabe's stronghold. Both Tsvangirai and Makoni
have been finding it difficult to penetrate these areas."
Ahead of the polls, President
Mugabe has given hefty salary increases to civil servants. Makoni
accuses him of "using money to buy votes."
Brendan Murphy, Studio
7 chief, warns that the extent to which ZANU-PF is in disarray could
be "overstated."
"The ZANU-PF apparatus
is still running. They still have the war veterans firmly behind
them; they spent the whole past several months marching around the
country to endorse Mugabe.. They have the (ZANU-PF) youth militia
who are not going to easily abandon Mugabe, I don't think. They
have the bureaucracy of government pretty firmly under their control."
Murphy says the ruling
party has all its resources that have proved so effective in securing
elections in the past in its favor "turned on" and "cranked
up."
"(The ZANU-PF machine)
is in motion right now. They're hoping to re-run this election like
(the victorious polls) in 2005, 2002."
Gavin is also convinced
that ZANU-PF's "implosion" may to a large degree be "wishful
thinking" and "exaggeration" on the part of the party's
opponents.
"It seems to me
also to be the case that ZANU-PF isn't just going to disappear (no
matter the outcome of the polls). ZANU-PF is going to be a part
of any transition that comes in the future."
But Zulu says even if
Mr. Mugabe is emerges victorious once again, the president's future
"won't be smooth."
"The economy is
going to determine the future of Zimbabwe," Zulu states. "For
how long can the people continue to suffer? That is the problem
for Mr. Mugabe. His biggest enemy will be the economy. That's one
thing that he cannot rig."
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