|
Back to Index
Cronies
with blood on hands fear arrest if president Robert Mugabe resigns
Christina
Lamb, The Sunday Times (UK)
April 13, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3736221.ece
"WHEN you join in
a political fight by way of an election you must be prepared to
lose," President Robert Mugabe told a rally in Nyanga, just
three days before the March 29 polls.
Getting fewer
votes than your opponent clearly does not constitute losing in the
lexicon of the Zimbabwean leader, who has stubbornly stayed in power
for 28 years. Instead, it means people have "voted incorrectly"
and must be taught otherwise by the usual methods of violence and
withholding food. The lists of results published at polling stations
to make the vote more transparent have proved useful for identifying
the areas most in need of such voter education.
The 84-year-old president's
refusal to step down following elections in which even his own party
admits that his opponent Morgan Tsvangirai received more votes,
should not have come as a surprise.
The first time the people
of Zimbabwe stood up to Mugabe was in the referendum of February
2000, when they overwhelmingly voted to reject his new constitution.
I was in the country at the time and was caught up in the excitement
of people asserting themselves against their leader. Mugabe appeared
on state TV to concede defeat, declaring: "Government accepts
the results and respects the will of the people."
He looked old and tired,
and as this was only my third visit to the country, I confidently
predicted his demise. "No, this is very bad," said a Zimbabwean
friend who, like many, had once been a great supporter of the liberation
leader. "You will see." Within weeks, the retaliation
had started. It began with the farm invasions, for white farmers
had funded the newly formed opposition. Across the country, "youth
training camps" sprang up for the so-called Green Bombers who
used violence and rape to spread terror throughout the countryside.
Violence was nothing
new for Mugabe, who famously once declared: "I have degrees
in violence." As many as 20,000 people are believed to have
been massacred in the 1980s in his campaign against the people of
Matabele-land who had supported Joshua Nkomo, his rival in the independence
movement. What was new in 2000 was the international criticism -
until the mid 1990s Mugabe was still receiving honorary degrees
from around the world and in 1994 was awarded an honorary knighthood.
Elections for parliament
in 2000 and 2005, and for president in 2002, were marked by further
violence and intimidation. On each occasion, an atmosphere of hope
was followed by a sense of anticlimax when results were rigged and
nothing changed.
In 2005 it was
the cities that had voted most heavily against him and he soon retaliated
again. Operation
Murambatsvina, a so-called "urban beautification programme",
meant sending bulldozers to demolish vast townships in Harare and
elsewhere, destroying the homes of more than 700,000 people.
Last month's elections
were the most peaceful of the last decade. The unexpected freedom
of the opposition to campaign led many to believe Mugabe's own security
forces were refusing to do his bidding.
I was surprised, then,
when, after a day of following Tsvangirai to rallies in Mugabe's
heart-land, I went to see the opposition leader and found him downcast.
"I feel I may go
into the Guinness Book of Records for winning the most elections
and never getting power," he said. "Suddenly you find
you're 60 and you're still at it. Of course you think, what's the
point?"
For the Zimbabwean president,
there is more than just political power at stake. "You cannot
underestimate the Charles Taylor effect," said a former confidant
of Mugabe, referring to the Liberian warlord turned president who
accepted exile in Nigeria, only to find himself being tried in the
International Criminal Court, accused of war crimes. "He is
terrified of ending up in the Hague, as, by the way, are many of
those around him."
Even if Mugabe decided
he had had enough, he would have to face the fact that he has become
a hostage of his own system. Over the years, he has cleverly woven
a web of patronage. Party officials, senior military and police,
high court judges and even bishops have been kept on side with handouts
of farms and access to perks such as cheap fuel and an official
exchange rate that enables them to buy foreign currency for a hundredth
of the market rate.
This has created a mafia
of several thousand people, many of whom have blood on their hands.
Should any contemplate switching sides, meticulous records kept
on file in a special archive in the Reserve Bank could be used against
them.
Key figures who see their
survival at stake include Constantine Chiwenga, the army chief,
Augustine Chihuri, the police commissioner, Henry Muchena, an air
vice-marshal, a number of former military commanders, Gideon Gono,
the powerful governor of the Reserve Bank, and long-time politburo
members such as Didymus Mutasa.
Although Tsvangirai says
he has promised Mugabe "an honourable exit", he cannot
give guarantees to all these others. "No matter what Tsvangirai
says about guaranteeing President Mugabe's safety, we cannot trust
the man," said a member of Zanu-PF. "If one day he gets
a call from Gordon Brown or George Bush and is told to arrest Mugabe,
do you think he won't do that?"
The military hierarchy
is particularly worried. A leaked memo reported Muchena, the air
vice-marshal, as stating that Zanu-PF "did not fight a liberation
war to have Zimbabweans vote incorrectly. The military has now taken
over the organisation of the campaign and five senior military officers
have been assigned to each constituency to ensure that in the next
round the people vote correctly".
For his part,
Tsvangirai has resisted pressure from younger members of his party
to call a mass uprising. He told me last month: "If I'd put
people on the streets last time, they would have been mauled to
pieces. I don't want to be responsible for this."
Tsvangirai's
main hope is international pressure. Brown has stepped up his criticism
of events in Zimbabwe, and African leaders who gathered in Zambia
yesterday want to break the deadlock. However, even if fellow African
leaders finally stand up to Mugabe, it is unclear what they can
achieve.
The leader best placed
to apply pressure is Thabo Mbeki, the president of South Africa,
but he has long shown reluctance to act against the veteran leader
and has no love for Tsvangirai, making clear that he would prefer
Zimbabwe's ruling party to find a replacement for Mugabe.
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
|