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Mugabe Set for "Ugly" Campaign
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 06, 12-Feb-05)
By Chiedza Banda
in Harare
February 12,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_006_3_eng.txt
President kicks
off election campaign that seems certain to be disfigured by violence.
Zimbabwe president
Robert Mugabe has launched his ruling ZANU PF party’s general election
campaign with a blistering attack on British prime minister Tony Blair,
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Zimbabwe opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai.
Wearing a bandana
in Zimbabwe’s national colours, Mugabe denounced Blair as a liar, Rice
as a slave of white men, and Tsvangirai as a stooge of the West.
The bitterness of
Mugabe’s two-and-a-half hour tirade late on Friday, February 11, has set
the tone for what now looks certain to be an ugly and violent campaign.
It came as one of
the few remaining white commercial farmers remaining was abducted and
strangled to death with wire by youth militiamen and so-called war veteran
supporters of Mugabe.
Norwegian-born Ole
Sunde, 66, became the 13th white farmer to die in ZANU PF’s land invasion
campaign. His assailants seized him on his Musozowa Farm, near Banket,
northwest of Harare, and drove him into nearby forest where he was killed.
Commercial Farmers
Union president Doug Taylor-Freeme said Sunde had serious head injuries
and had been strangled with wire. It was impossible to establish an official
cause of death because Zimbabwe’s last forensic pathologist resigned and
quit the country nine months ago.
Two of Sunde’s white
neighbours who went to his assistance were also abducted and, as yet,
their fate remains unknown.
The Sunde attack is
expected to trigger a series of attacks on the 400 remaining white farmers.
In 2000, when the president gave the signal to war veterans, party supporters
and youth militiamen to invade agricultural land, there were 5000 white
commercial farmers, whose produce made Zimbabwe the breadbasket of Africa.
Taylor-Freeme said 20 white farming families still in the Banket area
immediately quit their properties after Sunde’s murder and moved into
flats in Harare.
"The man you
call Blair, I call him B-liar," Mugabe told a rally of 3000 wildly
cheering ZANU PF supporters at the election campaign launch rally at the
Harare International Conference Centre. "I say this because he goes
around telling lies to the rest of Europe that the problem in Zimbabwe
is one of lack of democracy, lack of human rights and lack of transparency.
"It is now again
the time to demonstrate to the world that it is we who established democracy
in Zimbabwe. We taught the British what democracy for Zimbabwe was."
As the president said
the March 31 poll would be an "anti-Blair election", banners
were unfurled which read, "2005 election – time to bury Blair and
his puppets"; "2005 anti-Blair election – Blair keep your England,
I’ll keep my Zimbabwe"; and "Zimbabwe will never be a colony
again".
Turning to Rice, Mugabe,
who will turn 81 later this month, said, "The white man is the slave
master to her. She says Zimbabwe is one of the five or six outposts of
tyranny. Ah well, she has got to echo her master’s voice." It was
the first time Mugabe had responded to Rice’s branding of Zimbabwe as
an outpost of tyranny along with North Korea, Cuba, Belarus, Burma and
Iran.
The president labelled
Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC,
which came close to toppling ZANU PF and Mugabe in the last parliamentary
election in 2000, a stooge of the West who had lobbied the US, the European
Union and Britain to impose sanctions on his own country
"Morgan Tsvangirai,
you sold out to the whites," said Mugabe. "It is you who has
invited Blair, it is you that has lobbied for sanctions that affect the
same people that you want to vote for you.
"Time and time
again you run to Blair, (US President George) Bush. What do you want them
to do? We are a sovereign people, sovereignty derived from the fact of
our independence in 1980. We are masters of our land. Do we need Blair
or Bush or anyone to think for us?"
Mugabe said because
Zimbabwe was a democratic country, the MDC was free to campaign anywhere
in Zimbabwe without fear. "Let anyone else who wants to participate
come into the arena," he said. "They are free to seek for votes.
We know they will lose. When we win they will say elections were rigged.
Rest assured, you will hear that many times. You will hear Blair saying
there is no democracy."
Britain and other
western countries have backed an assertion by the MDC that ZANU-PF rigged
2000 parliamentary elections and a presidential vote two years later in
which Mugabe won another six years in office. ZANU-PF insists it won fairly.
The MDC last week lifted a threat to boycott this year's polls, saying
it would take part although it doubted the contest would be free or fair.
Political analysts
say the elections are almost certain to return ZANU-PF to power, prolonging
a political and economic crisis they say has ruined the once prosperous
southern African country.
A flavour of the way
the coming poll is likely to be skewed towards the ruling party came in
a new government edict banning opposition and independent candidates from
canvassing support among army, air force, police and prison personnel,
all of them considered to be part of the bedrock of ZANU PF’s grip on
power since independence 25 years ago.
Commanders at army,
police and prison camps have in the past few weeks refused the candidates
permission to hold meetings or distribute manifestoes in their barracks
where thousands of service personnel live with their families. ZANU PF
candidates and government ministers have been entering freely to canvas
for support.
Harare lawyer and
senior MDC candidate Tendai Biti, who was refused entry into Chikurubi
prison complex, east of the capital, said, "It is unconstitutional
and immoral to bar the opposition from campaigning in camps and barracks.
Uniformed officers must be given the right of choice. Politicians must
be allowed to campaign freely if Zimbabwe is a democratic country."
Just before the 2002
presidential election, controversially won by Mugabe, the country’s army,
air force, police, prison and secret service chiefs declared in a joint
statement that they would not allow anyone to take over the country who
did not fight in Zimbabwe’s 1970s independence war. Tsvangirai, a trade
unionist, was an opponent of the former white government but did not become
a guerrilla fighter.
The statement was
seen as a clear threat to stage a coup should Tsvangirai win the presidential
election.
*Chiedza Banda
is the pseudonym of the IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
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