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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
No
to a government of national unity! Only united mass action will
defeat Mugabe!
International Socialist Organization of Zimbabwe
June 23, 2008
http://links.org.au/node/489
After the publication
of the original article, Movement for Democratic Change presidential
candidate Morgan Tsvangirai held a press conference at which he
issued a statement
to the effect that the MDC is pulling out of the presidential run-off
election because conditions for a free and fair election do not
exist, [due to the] the massive violence against his party and civic
society. The press conference followed the disruption of his final
rally in Harare by ZANU-PF vigilantes on June 22. Tsvangirai stated
that the MDC was to carry out further consultations and would announce
the details of the way forward.
We welcome the position
taken by the MDC, and initial reports indicate that this position
has been accepted by MDC and civic society activists and supporters.
However, this decision
needs to be followed by quick and concrete steps on the way forward,
based on a united-front and mass-action strategy, as indicated [in
the earlier article below]. We are [aware] that sections of the
bourgeoisie, the Rhodesian right wing and the imperialist West will
not be happy with this decision, seeing it as a premature surrender
and may even put pressure on the MDC to rescind the decision.
Taking advantage of the
USA's presidency of the UN Security Council this month, they
might want to see a few more bodies in the streets ahead of the
election to justify their likely escalation of siege of the Mugabe
regime. But the MDC must resist this. Its activists and supporters,
as well as those in civic society, desperately need breathing space
to retreat in order, reorganise and begin the fightback. To wait
for a sure defeat come June 27 will make it that much more difficult
to mobilise the necessary program of civil disobedience, mass action
and delegitimisation of the regime. Indeed, the economic situation
in the coming few weeks is going to see us descend to the parameters
of hell as the West and big business escalate pressure on the regime,
economically and politically, to force it into a neoliberal power-sharing
government of national unity (GNU) deal with the opposition.
This has put the regime
in a quagmire but it is likely to continue with its sham election
to gain legitimacy. Legally, it may invoke provisions of the electoral
laws which stipulate that withdrawal can be no later than 21 days
before the election and that in any case standing in the run-off
is by law for the top two contesting candidates. The key therefore
is to launch an immediate political program of delegitimisation
of the run-off election, locally, regionally and internationally.
Regroupment of civic
groups and the establishment of the united front of resistance of
the opposition and civic society has therefore now assumed paramount
importance. This is more so because of the massive likely pressure
on the MDC to now enter negotiations for a government of national
unity from South African president Thabo Mbeki, the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), the UN and the capitalist and imperialist
forces. This is no solution for working people and must be resolutely
rejected.
But given the
MDC's history of prevarication and the strong influence of
capitalist elites within its leadership, it may not surprise if
it ends up capitulating again. The lessons from Kenya are that united,
resolute and autonomous activities and mobilization by a united
front of civic society can stop this and embolden the more radical
sections of the opposition to fight rather than capitulate to the
regime.
Precarious
security situation - reign of terror
June 20,
2008 -- As the nation gears up for the presidential run-off election
on June 27, the regime of Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe has unleashed
a reign of terror across the country. The level of violence and
political intimidation now far exceeds that of before the 2000 elections.
The economic collapse is severe and unprecedented. Reserve Bank
of Zimbabwe governor Gideon Gono's floating of the Zimbabwe
dollar has led to its collapse to ZW$6 billion to US$1, and inflation
now at more that 2 million per cent, with prices going up twice
a week. The Zimbabwe people are truly suffering.
Since May 1
there have been arbitrary arrests of civic leaders, starting with
the two-week detention
of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Union's president and secretary general.
Fourteen Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) leaders were detained
for nearly a month for protesting the delay in releasing the election
results. Two of their leaders, Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu,
remain detained in Chikurubi Prison. Also arrested and harassed
are church, student and NGO leaders and teachers.
NGOs and social
movements have effectively been closed down by the regime, despite
assertions to the contrary. Over the past week, state agents have
moved door to door at NGO offices, forcing them to close or confiscating
computers and files. [There have been raids] on the offices of ZimRights,
the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), Zimbabwe
national Students' Union (ZINASU), Padare/Enkundleni/Men's
Forum on Gender (Padare), Bulawayo
Agenda, the Crisis
Coalition, the Combined
Harare Residents' Association (CHRA) and the International
Socialist Organisation (ISO). Humanitarian NGOs providing food
relief, medicines and support to HIV-AIDS patients have been particularly
hit.
ZANU-PF bases have been
set up in townships where MDC and civic groups activists are being
forced to attend night vigils and/or assaulted. Several of our ISO
members from Mbare, Sunningdale, Epworth and Chitungwiza have had
their houses raided, forcing them to flee while others have been
brutally assaulted. Tec Bara, the ISO Harare gender coordinator
and Zimbabwe Social Forum national deputy convenor for gender, is
currently hospitalised after being brutally assaulted at her home.
Three of our Mutare comrades were also assaulted and brutalised.
A Women Coalition's hostel in Kambuzuma housing fleeing women
and their children was raided and people forced to flee. In Budiriro,
the national deputy leader of the ``war veterans'',
Joseph Chinotimba has turned an HIV-AIDS clinic into a war chamber.
The MDC is receiving
the brunt of the attacks. Tsvangirai has been repeatedly arrested,
his rallies banned and campaign buses and vehicles impounded. The
MDC is totally blacked-out
from the state-controlled daily newspapers, radio stations and TV,
while under Operation Dzikisai Madhishi, people are being forced
to remove satellite dishes from their homes. Detained MDC secretary
general Tendai Biti faces treason
charges, carrying the death penalty. This past week in Harare,
the wife of the MDC mayor-elect of Harare was abducted and killed,
houses in townships fire-bombed with four people killed, and 20
houses in the Chipinge rural village of NCA chairperson Lovemore
Madhuku were torched. The attorney general has said no
bail will be granted to those facing "political violence''
charges (virtually all from the opposition), while Patrick Chinamasa,
the minister of legal and parliamentary affairs, said he will be
declaring a general amnesty for all petty criminals to create room
for political prisoners.
Operation
MakaVhoterapi
ZANU-PF
has virtually closed off the rural areas from the opposition under
Operation MakaVhoterapi (`Operation Where Did You Vote').
As presidential spokesperson, G. Charamba put it:
``Fundamentally, MDC
cannot win the runoff; will not win it . . . Unlike in March, rural
Zimbabwe is now another country for MDC . . . and Tsvangirai will
be lucky to find even election agents. In towns, yes, but nowhere
else. From end of 1976, l saw war and the making of structures that
nourish it. There are many in Tsvangirai's camp old enough
to interpret the times for him. I am sure they have seen what is
happening in the country side, watched and correctly read the furrowed
foreheads of those who will take the necessary decisions should
and when that becomes necessary. Enough hints have been dropped
regarding what will wash and will not wash come the morning after
June 27. A mere twiddle by a blunt pen cannot return this country
to bondage "
There are three basic
objectives behind the regime's crackdown. First, so ZANU-PF
can win the crucial presidential elections by any means necessary.
As we previously argued in September 2007: ``the chances of an opposition
victory are slim . . . as in 2002 and 2005, the opposition is deluding
itself. The playing field is so stacked against them and they have
very little counter measures to these, as ZANU-PF itself for instance
had in 1980. The entire state machinery, including the media, is
being mobilised to ensure a ZANU-PF victory by hook or crook . . .
war veterans and chiefs are being mobilised to make the rural areas
a no-go area for the opposition.''
Will
ZANU-PF's strategy work?
Increasingly,
over the last few weeks, an election that MDC was clearly poised
to win has turned and a Mugabe ``victory'' is now the
most likely result as the MDC structures are decimated and the rural
population bludgeoned and starved into submission. Peasants are
correctly aware that the ward-based system of voting will make it
easy for ZANU-PF to identify villages that vote against them and
exert revenge.
Various reports
indicate the game plan. Known MDC activists will be forced to plead
illiteracy and be accompanied by senior ZANU-PF village leaders,
who will "assist'' them in voting. The day after
elections, all villagers [will be] ordered to assemble near counting
stations and await results so that it can be confirmed that they
have truly repented. This is exactly what Charamba means, when he
says the structures of war have now been resuscitated in the countryside.
The crackdown is also designed to neutralise any potential centres
of resistance to a Mugabe ``victory'', which this time
will be quickly announced.
The MDC and civic society
are paying a heavy price for failing to heed warnings not to take
the election route as their principal strategy for achieving change
rather than a central strategy of mass action centred around a fighting
united front of the opposition, civic society and the labour movement
demanding a new democratic constitution before any elections.
The ZAPU [Zimbabwe African
People's Union] was only able to withstand Gukurahundi because
of structures rooted in a committed core of cadres and not protest
voters. [Mugabe launched a brutal war of terror on the Ndebele people,
who were assumed to be ZAPU supporters and therefore dissidents.
In what became known as Gukurahundi, between 1983 and 1985, up to
20,000 people died in the Matabeleland and Midlands regions.].
At best, elections should
only have been used as a secondary tactic to mobilise people for
the central strategy of mass action. Capitalist elites who have
used their money to commodify our struggles and worm their way into
leadership positions in the opposition and civic society stopped
this and built false illusions around the elections and marginalised
the activists who built the party and are today sorely needed.
Even if ZANU-PF
loses, Mugabe has declared that he will not hand over power to the
MDC but rather go to war -- Hatingaregi nyika yakauya neropa ichitorwa
ne penzura, tinoda kuona kuti chakasimba chii gidi kana penzura
("We cannot let go a country that we won through the barrel
of a gun by a simple vote - we will see which is stronger
- the gun or a pencil.'') A radio report on Power
FM quoted Mugabe declaring at a rally -- "If you thought Hitler
is gone, then you are mistaken, because Hitler is not only back
but back here in Zimbabwe.''
The second objective
is to recapture the parliamentary majority for ZANU-PF by convicting
MDC-elect MPs or forcing them to flee. As Charamba says: They are
on the run, but will not run much longer. That may mean several
by-elections which (Tsvangirai) knows he will not win.''
Indeed it is likely that
by the time parliament convenes, enough opposition MPs will either
be in detention or have fled to give ZANU-PF the majority to elect
both the speaker of the House of Assembly and president of Senate
despite being the minority party.
The third objective
is preparation for a ZANU-PF-dominated but neoliberal and pro-business
government of national unity with the MDC after the elections. In
our September 2007 perspective we stated that because of the imploding
economic crisis and "despite his rhetoric, Mugabe is now ready
to capitulate and enter into an elitist compromise deal with the
MDC, the West and business. But only after the 2008 elections, which
he hopes to use to legitimise his party's claim to being the
senior player in such alliance, deal with his party's succession
problem as well as protect his legacy, person and family besides
his little burial plot at Heroes Acre.''
Many of his top officials
have indeed been quoted suggesting the GNU is an indispensable option
to deal with the Zimbabwean crisis. The crackdown is designed to
force the MDC into such a GNU and preempt any potential resistance
from its radicals or civic society. This is worsened by power struggles
in the opposition ahead of its congress next year. Today many of
the cowardly elites who have wormed their way to the top in the
opposition will, as we have been warning for over two years, gladly
accept the GNU, with the support of business, Mbeki, SADC and most
of the West, fearful of the further radicalisation of the Zimbabwean
crisis.
ZANU-PF tactics are thus
working. Already the MDC is now totally silent, even in its urban
township strongholds, as ZANU-PF holds sway. As one comrade said,
"ve MDC tapeta miswe" (the MDC has put its tail behind
its legs). Even civic groups that have not been raided are now stampeding
to close down their offices. Fear stalks the nation one week before
the election.
Way
forward : Mobilise for united front for democracy and mass action
The
first and most important thing is to confront the veil of fear that
threatens to suffocate us. The defiance of the closure of offices
by several NGOs is correct. Even if the regime closes our offices,
we must not allow it to close down our movements -- underground
alternatives must be urgently built. But no one group can withstand
this pressure alone. We need a united collective response. This
is why for the last three years and at the People's Convention
we were calling for the need to build a radical united front of
civic groups, the labour movement and the anti-capitalist movement,
autonomous of the MDC, even if working with it. One capable of initiating
united front-based mass actions without necessarily being subordinated
to the MDC. And one based on a pro-working people and anti-neoliberal/capitalist
ideology.
At the Convention we
unfortunately allowed our tactical differences on whether to support
or boycott the March elections to divide us and stop us from the
bigger project of building such united front. Today we all pay a
heavy price. But it is not too late to regroup, reorganise and offer
leadership in action along with the MDC. Even under this crackdown
we can regroup, initially on a defensive program of solidarity for
those under attack and in self-defence and counter-attacks where
necessary.
Most urgently we call
for a summit of leaders of the opposition and civic society to set
up a united front of resistance. We believe that such united front
must be totally rooted in and organise around the bread and butter
concerns of working people, including peasants and the unemployed,
as opposed to the wealthy capitalist elites in business, locally
and internationally.
Indeed the very origins
of the MDC (and similar movements in the global South) lie in the
massive protests of the late 1990s against poverty induced by the
Mugabe regime's neoliberal capitalist program of ESAP (structural
adjustment). A new and powerful aspect of the MDC's campaign
in the March elections was an emphasis on such bread and butter
issues of the ordinary people. Any struggle against the regime that
fails to do this will be outflanked on its left by this crafty regime,
which has shown, most powerfully around the land question, a strong
capacity to cynically manipulate the poor's concerns to remain
in power and demonise the opposition as a stooge of the West and
the business class. Without such a united front and a pro-poor,
pro-working people and anti-capitalist ideology we shall not prevail
against this regime. The Peoples Charter of the People's Convention
offers a powerful starting point.
One of the first things
to do is to convene a massive united front rally for democracy in
the centre of Harare a few days before the election or the week
after, to be convened by the opposition-led by the MDC, civic groups,
trade unions and the churches. If possible the unions must call
for all workers in Harare not to go to work but to attend the rally.
The purpose of the rally is first to fight the veil of fear and
rebuild confidence in our movements. Second to send a message to
the dictatorship that we will not be cowered; that we demand an
immediate cessation of the reign of terror, compensation of all
victims, immediate release of all political prisoners. It would
send a warning to the regime that the people will not accept its
June 27 circus and that the struggle will only accelerate after
June 27 to include general strikes, stayaways, class boycotts and
civil disobedience.
On the election, our
preferred position as the ISO has been to boycott any fake elections
without a new constitution and deny the regime's elections
any legitimacy. The alternative is for a regrouped united front
of civic society and the opposition to launch a serious and determined
program of civil disobedience and mass action, supported by regional
and international solidarity from working peoples and progressive
movements. Indeed over the next week the MDC leadership has a huge
decision to make about whether to continue participating in a sham
election designed to clothe a dictatorship in legitimacy, or withdraw,
regroup and lead a fightback of mass action and civil disobedience.
However, if the MDC still decides to continue running. The ISO,
in view of MDC's massive performance in the March parliamentary
and presidential elections and the desire of many Zimbabweans to
vote, has now modified its position to call for unconditional but
fraternally critical support to Tsvangirai.
Our criticism is what
we perceive as the increasing domination of the party leadership
by capitalist and Western elites and the marginalisation of workers
and radicals. This will lead to its likely pursing a neoliberal
capitalist agenda if it assumes power, to the detriment of working
people. And secondly its disastrous strategy of relying on the electoral
route rather than mass action. But the Mugabe regime is driving
us into hell and the people need some breathing space in order to
reorganise and resume our battle for real democracy and against
the capitalist and imperialist bloodsuckers.
We therefore urge all
our members, supporters, allies and working people in general to
defy the regime' intimidation and go out and vote in the election
for Tsvangirai. However voting must only be seen as a tactic to
keep the flames of the movement alive and to use the space to organise
and mobilise for all out people's mass action before and after
June 27, and not as the central strategy for change. The defeat
of ZANU-PF in March shows how much the masses now want change. Even
today in the midst of the onslaught, opposition activists at the
local level have organised themselves and are fighting back in places
like Epworth, Bikita, Zaka and Chimanimani. But these are isolated
actions, easily crushed unless more central leadership is offered.
The spirit to fight in civic society is still there. Indeed, when
an ISO delegation visited the imprisoned WOZA leaders this week,
we were impressed by their high spirits despite the very harsh conditions,
including being denied jerseys [jumpers] in this biting winter.
Or the many maimed and displaced MDC activists who are vowing that
despite all they are still going to vote against the regime come
June 27.
At the same time under
no circumstances must we agree to the GNU sell-out idea. There can
be no marriage with such a murderous regime -- we must consign it
to its true destiny -- the dustbin of history. The GNU is a project
for the dictatorship to perpetuate itself and for the capitalist
and the imperialist elites to ensure that the poverty that the capitalist
ZANU-PF government started with its ESAP is perpetuated forever,
but now buttressed by a working-people supported MDC. It's
time we allow the ordinary people to take charge of the struggle
that is rightfully theirs and ensure an outcome that achieves real
democracy, economically and politically, for the majority and not
just the political and capitalist elites as we have seen so many
times in recent history in the region and internationally -- in
Zambia, Malawi, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Eastern Europe.
As our brothers and sisters in Latin America are pushing ahead we
say no to capitalism and yes to international socialism as the way
forward for humanity.
Finally, ISO
wishes to express our utmost gratitude to all those who have sent
solidarity messages and donations to us and other organisations
and still make a further urgent appeal for assistance. To send solidarity
messages, receive updates or make a donation please email us at
iso.zim@gmail.com
Shinga Murombo!
Jambanja Ndizvo! Smash the dictatorship! Viva socialism!
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