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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Threat
of coup, martial law, or even war - ICG
IRIN News
May 22, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78360
With governance
in limbo and post-election violence spreading beyond control in
Zimbabwe, rights groups and think-tanks have warned of a military
coup, martial law or even civil war. Hope that a run-off after disputed
presidential elections will bring reconciliation is fading, and
calls for urgent pan-African intervention are increasing.
"Zimbabwe's
transition to democracy is being held hostage," said a report
released on 21 May by the International Crisis Group (ICG), a Brussels-based
think-tank.
Since the disputed presidential
ballot on 29 March, Zimbabwe "has no elected president or
legally constituted cabinet; parliament has not been convened, and
ZANU-PF [the ruling party since Zimbabwe's independence from Britain
in 1980] and MDC [the opposition Movement for Democratic Change]
are challenging half the parliamentary result in court," the
report said.
According to the ICG,
President Robert Mugabe came in second to the MDC's Morgan Tsvangirai
for the first time in 28 years and "has fought back by withholding
the presidential results for five weeks and launching a countrywide
crackdown [on opposition supporters]."
ZANU-PF party hardliners
and the military "will not simply hand over power to the MDC.
They and Mugabe likely manipulated the presidential results to show
a run-off was necessary, and have put in a strategy to retain power
by force." Should Mugabe manage to cling to power, the consequences
would be "catastrophic" the ICG predicted.
Failure to address the
loyalty of the security forces "would risk a Tsvangirai victory,
leading to a military coup or martial law, and the security services
splitting along factional lines."
No faith
in a re-run
A second
round of voting for presidential candidates Mugabe and Tsvangirai
has been scheduled for 27 June, but most observers fear the violence
and intimidation - allegedly perpetrated by security forces, war
veterans, youth militia and supporters of the ruling ZANU-PF party
- against MDC supporters have eroded the credibility of any possible
outcome.
"There is growing
risk of a coup, either before a run-off (in a pre-emptive move to
deny victory) or after a Tsvangirai win," the report warned.
In a letter written earlier
this week, Human Rights Watch (HRW) urged the African Union (AU)
to "immediately send election observers and human rights monitors
to Zimbabwe to promote free and fair voting in the presidential
run-off."
The international rights
watchdog said in a statement that its researchers in Zimbabwe had
documented widespread and systematic violence by ZANU-PF in the
provinces of Masvingo, Manicaland and Mashonaland West, East and
Central.
"ZANU-PF officials
and supporters, 'war veterans', the army and police
have been carrying out a violent campaign of beatings, torture and
killings against opposition MDC supporters ... despite the political
agreement to hold a run-off presidential election, the ZANU-PF violence
has continued."
HRW said post-election
violence had left at least 27 people dead, hundreds beaten and tortured,
and thousands displaced and in urgent need of protection.
Calling for the immediate
deployment of human rights monitors and observers throughout the
country, Georgette Gagnon, the Africa director of HRW, said: "The
AU should publicly demand that the Zimbabwean government halt its
campaign of violence, torture and intimidation. Unless the current
situation is reversed, more civilians will be brutalised and die."
Solidarity Peace Trust
(SPT), a South African-based human rights non-governmental organisation
(NGO), said in a report on the violence in Zimbabwe, released on
21 May: "There needs to be a general recognition that Zimbabwe
is sinking fast into the conditions of a civil war, propelled largely
by the increasing reliance on violence by the ruling party to stay
in power. A run-off of the Presidential election in the current
environment is neither practical nor desirable."
Too
late to mediate?
The
SPT report called on South African President Thabo Mbeki, appointed
as mediator
between the Zimbabwean parties by the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), to "take urgent steps to bring the major
parties together into a renewed mediation process."
But faith in Mbeki has
waned. While the AU and SADC called for the election results to
be released, and criticised the ongoing violence, Mbeki "has
continued to shield Mugabe", and his reluctance to criticise
Mugabe or condemn the violence "has badly undermined his credibility",
the ICG report commented.
Botswana's foreign minister,
Phandu Skelemani, noted that "Everyone agreed that things
are not normal, except Mbeki. Maybe Mbeki is so deeply involved
that he firmly believes things are going right. But now he understands
that the rest of SADC feels this is a matter of urgency, and we
are risking lives and limbs being lost. He got that message clearly."
According to the ICG,
the best way out of the crisis would be to form a government of
national unity under MDC leadership. "African leaders, with
support of the international community, must step in to stop the
violence and resolve the deepening political crisis, ideally by
facilitating an agreement establishing an MDC-led transitional government."
Most importantly, the
ICG said, with or without a presidential run-off, third-party African-led
negotiations "are essential to help gain acceptance from the
military for a handover of power."
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