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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe
declares war
Rowan
Philp and Brendan Boyle, The Sunday Times (SA)
June
15, 2008
http://www.thetimes.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=785112
Zimbabwe's
President Robert Mugabe has vowed to "go to war" to prevent
the Movement for Democratic Change taking power - as the race for
the presidency enters its final phase. With only 13 days to go to
the runoff poll , Mugabe yesterday insisted he would not countenance
defeat. "We are prepared to fight for our country and to go
to war for it," he told a rally of cheering supporters. The
belligerent 84-year-old dictator's comments cap a week in
which: The winner of the March 29 poll, Movement for Democratic
leader Morgan Tsvangirai, and his second-in-command, Tendai Biti,
were arrested - in Tsvangirai's case, repeatedly - on spurious
charges; Policemen, soldiers and their wives were forced to vote
in the presence of their commanders; The government ordered Zimbabweans
to pull
down satellite dishes so they could not watch foreign television
stations in an effort to prevent them seeing MDC election ads expected
to be flighted in South Africa; and reports of violence, intimidation
and harassment continued to stream in. Mugabe and his henchmen promised
civil war if the MDC won. The escalation of violence in Zimbabwe
reached such alarming proportions that a group of 40 African leaders
- including 14 former African presidents, former UN secretary-general
Kofi Annan and Archbishop Desmond Tutu - published an open
letter on Friday calling for an end to violence and intimidation
ahead of the runoff. "We are deeply troubled by the current
reports of intimidation, harassment and violence," the leaders
said. Botswana on Friday lodged a formal protest about the arrest
of Tsvangirai and Biti. "These repeated arrests do not augur
well for a free, fair and democratic election," Foreign Minister
Phandu Sekeleman told the BBC.
Meanwhile, the blueprint
of Mugabe's bloody crackdown was exposed in an explosive set
of top-secret documents apparently drawn up by Zimbabwe's
Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO). The smuggled documents
cannot be independently verified, but the MDC confirmed it considered
them genuine and was acting on their contents. It said it was warning
MDC members whose names appeared in the documents. An MDC spokesman
said: "This is clearly the brutal plan Mugabe has followed
in the past two months." The file of more than a dozen documents
- each addressed to CIO senior officials, and headed with detailed
codes and message numbers - include a recommendation for "massive
rigging, by any means possible - i.e. the manipulation of postal
votes in Zanu PF's favour, and reduction of polling stations
in MDC strongholds if possible". This week, police and Zimbabwean
defence industry sources confirmed reports that police, soldiers
and their wives had been forced to fill in their postal ballots
for the run- off in the presence of senior commanders.
The documents
also advocate: "Harassing MDC activists"; That Zanu PF
militias dress in MDC T-shirts and harass Mugabe supporters , thus
forcing them to "vote to defend their land" by tricking
them into believing the MDC was threatening them; A "thorough
vetting" of the directors of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission;
and Ensuring "war veteran leaders ... should take a leading
role in Zanu campaigns". The documents include an April 9 "master
plan" for Mugabe, titled "Suggestions to enhance Zanu
PF's chances in a rerun", which contains recommendations
that "His Excellency (Mugabe) should minimise hate messages
in his speeches" and focus on "strategies to revive the
country's economy" rather than the revolution and land
reform to win back voters. Another report , dated May 9, recommends
that the government "stop NGOs from venturing into rural areas"
and force them to "seek authority" to work in the field.
The Zimbabwean government last week stopped
aid groups and non-governmental organisations from working in the
country. Another secret report, dated May 15, detailed how the Joint
Operational Command ordered that public intimidation move away from
beatings "and that a new plan of snatching people from their
homes and ultimately disappearances should now be activated".
That week marked a dramatic surge in the abduction and murder of
MDC activists. The alleged CIO master plan concluded that only a
targeted terror campaign could stop the MDC, because "if the
run- off is held, President Mugabe will lose the election as the
people now have the confidence to come out and express their feelings
without fear".
Responding to the documents,
South African Presidency spokesman Mukoni Ratshitanga said President
Thabo Mbeki "has already expressed his concerns about the political
violence ". But he added: "We are mandated to mediate
with the political leadership, so while we respect the fact that
others will pronounce their views in public, we can't comment
on this or that claim." Meanwhile, Tsvangirai was arrested
again yesterday morning and released after three hours. Biti appeared
in court after a court ordered that he be produced following his
arrest on Thursday. At the closed hearing prosecutors said they
planned to charge him with "treason and making malicious statements
detrimental to the interests of the state", which could carry
the death penalty, Biti's lawyer said. Cosatu general secretary
Zwelinzima Vavi said Mbeki should tell Mugabe that if the poll was
held under the current circumstances, he would not be recognised
as president and that he and his ministers would never be allowed
into South Africa. "It is so sad, unbelievable that we are
allowing this to happen so close to home ... It's mass murder.
That's what is happening in Zimbabwe right now," he told
the Sunday Times. He said Cosatu was considering a border blockade
at the time of the election. Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille
said it was too late to ensure a free and fair election as Mugabe
was waging "a full-blown war of intimidation against his own
people".
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