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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Fear
versus democracy
IRIN News
June 06, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78625
Zimbabweans living in
South Africa returned in droves earlier this year to vote: this
time many are unlikely to make the trip for the second round runoff
of the presidential ballot, resigned to the "victory"
of incumbent Robert Mugabe.
In elections
on 29 March, the ruling ZANU-PF party lost its parliamentary majority
for the first time since independence in 1980, and Mugabe trailed
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai in the presidential vote. But
Mugabe, an 84-year-old former guerrilla fighter, has insisted he
will not leave State House - regardless of the outcome of the 27
June runoff.
Mugabe has repeatedly branded Tsvangirai and his MDC as agents of
imperialism, buying their way to 48 percent of the presidential
vote in March - just short of the 50 percent plus one that
Tsvangirai needed for a first-round knockout.
A new splinter group
of war veterans, the Revolutionary Council, with First Lady Grace
Mugabe as its patron, has called for the June poll to be scrapped.
The faction argues that elections cannot be held with the country
under "sanctions" - a reference to the freeze on
donor aid - and was ready to take up arms to "defend
the revolution".
The statement followed
comments last week by Chief-of-Staff Maj-Gen Martin Chedondo, who
said the army was not apolitical, and ordered all soldiers intending
to vote for the opposition to resign.
Emmanuel Hlabangana,
director of Diaspora Dialogue, a Johannesburg-based pro-democracy
organisation for Zimbabweans in exile, said the Zimbabwe government
was furiously trying to undermine the MDC before the June poll.
"The undemocratic
statements which have been made have only served to discourage some
people from going back home to vote, because they feel that their
vote will not count. The establishment wants to create a siege mentality
among Zimbabweans to lose hope," he told IRIN.
"After losing in
the first round of voting, ZANU-PF wants to make sure that the election
will be so close that Mugabe will declare himself the winner, then
arm twist Tsvangirai into a government of national unity with himself
[Mugabe] as the leader," said Hlabangana.
Political violence
and intimidation have also escalated: Tsvangirai was detained
by the police twice this week; the diplomatic community has been
harassed; on Thursday all aid organisations were ordered to stop
their operations on grounds of "political activity"
by some, and accused of supporting the MDC.
Raymond Majongwe,
secretary-general of the militant Progressive
Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), which has a branch in South
Africa, said thousands of his members had fled the country after
they were they were accused of backing the MDC.
"In my interactions
with our members, many have indicated that they are not prepared
to go back home and vote. They say - based on statements issued
by war veterans, the army and ruling party officials - it is not
likely that if Mugabe loses, he will surrender power."
Fambai Ngirande,
the advocacy and communications manager for the National
Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, a civil society
umbrella body, told IRIN from the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, that
even within the country many were too afraid to vote.
"The state-sponsored
political violence was systematic and targeted. Those who were affected
were known and perceived opposition supporters, election agents
for the opposition in the last elections, and opinion leaders such
as teachers and nurses. Because in our elections people can only
vote where they are ordinarily resident, very few will be brave
enough to go back to where they were displaced from in order to
vote," Ngirande said.
Mugabe's chief election
agent, Emmerson Mnangagwa, told IRIN that Mugabe was misunderstood
when he said he would not relinquish power. "Nobody goes into
an election thinking that they will lose, otherwise there would
be no point in contesting. What the president meant is that he does
not think he will lose and hand over power."
Asked to comment on statements
from the military and war veterans that they would not recognise
a Tsvangirai victory, Mnangagwa said they were speaking in their
"private capacity".
"If he [Mugabe]
loses the election, I will be the first to go to him as his chief
election agent and say: 'Boss, we have lost. We brought democracy
to Zimbabwe and we should defend it'. I will ask him if I should
draft his resignation speech, or whether he would rather draft his
own statement."
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