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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
the backlash begins as paramilitaries launch raids
Catherine Philp and Jan Raath, The Times (SA)
April 04, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3678392.ece
The ebbing regime of
Robert Mugabe began its fightback in earnest last night, launching
raids against opposition offices and foreign journalists in what
many feared was the start of a campaign of intimidation.
Paramilitary police raided
opposition offices at a hotel in central Harare, ransacking rooms
as riot police moved in to arrest foreign journalists at a guest
house in the capital.
George Sibotshiwe, spokesman
of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), said that
the party's headquarters in the centre of Harare and offices
in Meikles hotel in the capital had been raided. "They took
nothing. They simply ransacked the place," he said.
As many as four journalists
were arrested, including a reporter from the New York Times, in
a separate raid on Harare's York Lodge hotel, where many correspondents
were staying.
The moves, described
by opposition leaders as the beginnings of a "crackdown",
came after a day in which the besieged octogenarian leader appeared
in public for the first time since the polls in which he was defeated
by his challenger, Morgan Tsvangirai. Mr Mugabe was shown on state
television yesterday meeting African Union election observers —
his first public appearance since the close of polls.
Ruling party officials
subsequently announced that he would hold a critical politburo meeting
today to plot his next move. State media, the ruling Zanu (PF) party
and even — according to some — the President himself
have conceded that he lost the race to Mr Tsvangirai, but maintain
that the challenger failed to secure an absolute majority.
But the Government insisted
that Mr Mugabe was in no mood for surrender and was gearing up to
fight on. Fears that the embattled leader may yet resort to violence
peaked as news of the raids seeped out last night to Harare's
diplomatic community.
Earlier in the day a
senior government spokesman said that the party was preparing to
invoke "energy" that it had not tapped during the previous
election. "Zanu (PF) is ready for a run-off, we are ready
for a resulting victory," Bright Matonga, the Deputy Information
Minister, said.
"In terms of strategy,
we only applied 25 per cent of our energy into this campaign,"
he added, but the run-off would be different. "That is when
we are going to unleash the other 75 per cent that we did not apply
in the first case."Unconfirmed reports were circulating among
the diplomatic community about an alleged government plot to extend
the three-week run-up to the second round to three months, and to
use the time to shut down the provisions in the election law designed
to thwart poll-rigging.
Key among them is the
precedent of publicly posting each polling station's results
on its walls — a move that allowed the MDC, as well as independent
observers, to collate the figures and release them in a preemptive
strike against poll-fixing.
But well-placed sources
were adamant that any such attempts to manipulate the process would
fail, even if they were unprepared to rule out some last desperate,
and possibly violent, attempt to cling to power.
"Mugabe is a villain
of the first order," one source told The Times. "He
is desperate to stay in power and the sting may be in the tail."
Zimbabwe's African
neighbours are the only countries with any significant influence
over Mr Mugabe's regime but they have thus far failed to intervene
in any significant way. Yesterday's television appearance
came after Mr Mugabe met an African election observer team led by
Ahmad Tejah Kabbah, the former Sierra Leonean President. Mr Kabbah
has also met Mr Tsvangirai, who claims victory in the election with
50.3 per cent of the vote, but who had vowed to contest a run-off
if official election results award him less than 50 per cent.
Rumours have swirled
around Harare in the six days since the election, amid the absence
of information. Zimbabweans, drained by the fatigue of economic
collapse, have displayed epic patience in their wait for an outcome.
The slow drip-drip of parliamentary results has held people's
focus as they listen to radios, keeping their own running tallies
of the score.
But yesterday the information
vacuum yawned open again. The long-delayed partial results for the
Senate, parliament's upper chamber, began to start trickling
out only last night. The delay, blamed on logistical problems, again
heightened fears of manipulation. Since the presidential tally will
be released only when the full Senate count is completed, Zimbabweans
suspect a government plot to buy time.
"We will stay patient
because we must," said Blessing, a street vendor in the Harare
slums of Mbare. "But it is frustrating." News of the
Zanu (PF) loss of its parliamentary majority boosted morale, but
only led to further questions over the delay in the release of presidential
results.
The grinding logistics
of everyday life under Zimbabwe's collapsing economy have
kept many distracted from their fears of worst-case scenarios.
Yesterday, as every other
day, huge queues formed outside a bakery from morning as people
stood in line clutching bundles of cash, hopeful that there would
be food to buy. More than forty people were still queuing when,
at lunchtime, the bread ran out.
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