|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
goes to the brink
Alec Russell, New Statesman
April 03, 2008
http://www.newstatesman.com/200804030025
As starry-eyed
supporters of the Zimbabwean opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) queued to vote on Saturday 29 March there were far
too many police around for them to dare make their feelings plain.
So, instead, a series of irreverent text messages hummed from polling
station to polling station across the country.
"Bob 23
verses one to five," started one, a spoof of Psalm 23. "Mugabe
is my shepherd I shall not work. He makes me to lie down on park
benches. He leads me to be a thief, a prostitute, a liar and an
asylum-seeker. He restores my faith in MDC. He guides me in the
path of unemployment. Though I walk in the valley of Zim I shall
still be hungry!!!"
"Do you
know anyone with a pick-up truck?" ran another. "I have
a client who I want to move. He is moving this weekend from State
House to Kutama [Mugabe's rural retreat]."
For almost 24
hours the same giddy mood prevailed among supporters of the MDC.
Few celebrated publicly. Most in Harare walked home from the polls
- almost everyone walks in Zimbabwe these days to save the cost
of a standard bus fare, Z$40,000,000 or about US$1, equivalent to
a tenth of a standard labourer's monthly wage - keeping their voting
preference to themselves and their close friends. But increasingly
people dared to dream that, after 28 years in power - and three
disputed elections in the past eight years - the "old man"
was finally on his way out.
Such optimism
reached fever pitch after a pre-dawn press conference on the Sunday
morning following voting, when Tendai Biti, the puckish secretary
general of the MDC, strode to a podium and informed bleary-eyed
diplomats and journalists that his party was comfortably ahead.
But, for watchers of state television, it all came to a juddering
halt a few minutes before midnight on Sunday night. ZBC was playing
an unbelievably bad movie premised on Jim Hawkins running into Long
John Silver in the Caribbean 20 years after the Treasure Island
escapade and falling in love with his daughter.
Suddenly Long
John et al vanished off the screen to be replaced by the expressionless
features of a correspondent at the state-appointed Zimbabwe Election
Commission (ZEC).
The presenter
quickly introduced Judge George Chiweshe, chairman of the ZEC. He
had last been seen that same day as he was chased across the lobby
of a Harare hotel by outraged MDC supporters demanding to know why
he had not released any results. This time he was on safer ground.
He was in the election command centre in central Harare.
People who were
complaining about the time it was taking to verify the results should
be patient, he told the nation. "It's an involving and laborious
process. It takes time for results to filter through." And
as for "stakeholders" (read the MDC) who had ventured
to release early results: "The commission would like to reiterate
that it and it alone is the sole legitimate source of all results."
Innocents in
the world of Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu-PF party might have struggled
to understand the import of what developed into a 20-minute ramble.
To the MDC, however, the message was all too stark. After 24 hours
of seemingly being stunned into silence, the authorities had returned
to the fray: Mugabe and Zanu-PF were not going to go easily.
Party insiders
say that Mugabe was startled by the initial returns from polling
stations, which made it clear he was heading for defeat.
For the previous
12 months his senior aides had stacked the odds in his favour. In
March last year they gave orders to agricultural equipment companies
to have large numbers of rotivators, and rather smaller numbers
of tractors, ready for March 2008. These were duly rolled out with
great fanfare to small farmers in impoverished rural communities
in the weeks leading up to the 29 March vote. Food aid was doled
out to party supporters and, according to a dogged Human Rights
Watch researcher, Tiseke Kasambala, denied to MDC supporters. The
ZBC churned out endless encomia to the president, or the Fist of
Empowerment, as he is called on election posters.
Meanwhile, day
after day, giant rallies of happy, smiling people greeted him on
the campaign trail, presumably reassuring him that the opposition
talk of economic implosion had not been accepted by his loyal people.
As the New Statesman
went to press it was clear that despite Zanu-PF's advantages it
was all but impossible for it to deny the MDC had won and also that
insiders in the ruling party were realising there was no way to
massage the outcome. A projection by an independent survey group
underlined the difficulty the ZEC would have in issuing results
giving Mugabe victory. The findings gave Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC
49.4 per cent, with Mugabe 41.8 per cent.
This suggested
that the MDC leader was below the 50 per cent-plus-one vote mark
he needed to avoid a run-off, but the MDC's results suggested he
had enough votes to avoid a run-off. In short, Mugabe had been beaten.
He was not going
to go without a fight. On Sunday night he met the "securocrats"
of the Joint Operations Command, the body of security, intelligence
and military chiefs who in recent years have increasingly dominated
policymaking. According to some accounts of the meeting, some dared
to take a "dovish" stance and suggest that the veteran
autocrat should consider reaching an accommodation with the MDC.
The ultra-hawks
urging an immediate declaration of a state of emergency were believed
to have been talked out of such a drastic response. But what is
widely believed to have been the final decision was hardly conciliatory.
It was to stall for time, order the ZEC to dribble out results slowly
and see if they could not end up "fixing" the election
in the counting process, a senior former Zanu-PF official said.
Not long afterwards, the ZBC interrupted Treasure Island 2 or whatever
it was and introduced Chiweshe into Zimbabwean living rooms.
The phenomenon
of a long-serving independence leader being rejected by his people
has been seen before in Southern Africa. Kenneth Kaunda, the veteran
Zambian leader with a penchant for waving handkerchiefs, was unceremoniously
dumped by the electorate in 1991. Then, in 1994, Hastings Banda,
the eccentric Malawian tyrant, suffered a similar ejection from
State House. Both ultimately accepted their lot.
In recent weeks
both Tsvangirai and Simba Makoni, Mugabe's other challenger, a former
finance minister, have tried to tempt Mugabe to bow out gracefully.
Both indicated to me in interviews that they would not seek to humiliate
the former hero of the independence era if he lost.
Clinging
to power
But while Mugabe
was unwilling to follow the lead of these regional predecessors
- Harare legend has it that he laughed scornfully when he heard
that Kaunda had lost power through the ballot box - increasingly,
as the days passed after the elections, MDC optimism grew that a
deal would be struck with some of the more conciliatory generals
loyal to his regime. They would then, the MDC hoped, aided by support
from regional leaders, persuade Mugabe to step down.
The smart money
among diplomats and regional analysts is betting that even if Mugabe
does finagle his way back into power and cheat Tsvangirai of his
apparent victory, he cannot hope to last long in office. Makoni's
defection, while not backed in public by many senior cadres, reflects
an increasingly mutinous sentiment within Zanu-PF. While inflation
on paper is a "mere" 100,000 per cent, economists expect
it may be 500,000 by the end of this month.
Whatever happens,
Mugabe's aura of invincibility has been destroyed by the dramatic
events of the past week.
An extension
of his rule, even by, say, six months, would be a disaster for Zimbabwe.
Yet more desperate people would flee across the southern border
to join the between one and three million who have already crossed
into South Africa. Infant mortality, illiteracy and all those other
statistics that made Zimbabwe in Mugabe's early years in power the
envy of sub-Saharan Africa would continue to rise.
In short, the
spoof Psalm 23 would suddenly seem rather unfunny. At the time of
writing it was still possible that Mugabe would try to dig his heels
in one last time. But there was a sense that one of the last of
Africa's "Big Men" independence leaders was on his way
out.
*Alec Russell
is Southern Africa correspondent of the Financial Times
Zimbabwe
in numbers
- 100,000+%
rate of inflation
- Z$100,000
= £1.70
- Z$6.6m official
cost of a loaf of bread
- Z$15m black-market
cost of a loaf of bread
- 37 average
life expectancy
- 80% unemployment
rate
- 15.6% of
population is infected with HIV/Aids
- 75% of doctors
emigrate after earning medical degree
- 45% of Zimbabweans
are malnourished
- 5.9m registered
voters
- 9m ballots
printed by Electoral Commission
*Research by
Jax Jacobsen
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|