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Voter
apathy a major factor in ballot
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 07, 16-Feb-05)
By Marceline Ndoro in Chiweshe
February
16, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_007_1_eng.txt
Widespread voter
apathy mixed with a sense of despair and revulsion - especially
among the rural and urban poor - will be a major factor in Zimbabwe’s
looming parliamentary elections.
"Life has
become unbearable," 73-year-old Christine Rwanga, a card-carrying
member of President Robert Mugabe’s ruling ZANU PF party, told IWPR.
"When we
last went to vote [in parliamentary elections in 2000], we expected
change, but nothing happened. So why should we go to vote again
when we know that nothing will change for the better? Our leaders
don’t want to let go."
Rwanga, a barely
literate widow who lives with her 16-year-old orphaned granddaughter
in the Chiweshe communal tribal lands some 90 kilometres north of
Harare, said she had lost faith in the party she has supported since
independence in 1980 because it has failed to improve the lives
of ordinary people.
"Our lives
have become extremely difficult," she said. "Yes, [the
government] gives us seed and fertiliser, especially now at election
time, but that really does nothing to improve our lives."
The high cost
of living – Zimbabwe’s official inflation rate hit 620 per cent
last year – also causes problems for the population.
"We cannot
get money to send our children and grandchildren to school,"
said Rwanga. "Fees and uniforms are expensive and day-to-day
basic needs such as groceries have become unaffordable."
This old lady’s
views are shared by many in Zimbabwe today. Thousands of Mugabe
and ZANU PF loyalists do not intend to vote in the March 31 poll
because they believe that the result is a foregone conclusion –
victory for the president and his party.
"The rulers
always win, so what is the point of voting?" asked Tamburai
Garikai, a 53-year-old unemployed mother in Harare’s Chitungwiza
township.
"In the
old days, I was working at the family planning department and my
family had food on the table. But then I was laid off after independence,
and it’s a miracle how I and my family are surviving."
Her neighbour
Margie Chadzera earns enough from charity handouts to feed her family
of five grandchildren – whose parents have all died from AIDS -
once a day.
"Back then,"
she said, referring to some time in the past, "money was strong.
You could use it. Can we hope the elections will change anything?
I think we can say that the same people will win."
Apathy levels
have increased dramatically since the last parliamentary elections
in 2000, when the newly formed opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, MDC, won 57 of the 120 directly elected National Assembly
seats.
This galvanised
Mugabe and the ZANU PF, who suddenly realised they could be toppled
from power in a free and fair election.
Since then,
they have introduced a series of oppressive laws and other restrictions
that hobble opponents, who have also been cowed by widespread violence
emanating from the ruling party and executed through the army, police
and youth militia.
Nowhere is the
apathy more acute than in areas where the annual summer rains have
failed.
"This year
we will surely starve to death," said Daniel Munzara in the
village of Tsuwa in the eastern province of Manicaland. As he watches
his meagre maize crop wilt in a dried-out field, he told IWPR that
the tragedy had been exacerbated by Mugabe’s decision to expel the
international aid organisations which distributed emergency food
aid in the past. The president said Zimbabwe could feed itself without
foreign help.
In Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe’s second city, former ZANU PF local spokesman Sikhumbozo
Ndiweni, who left the party to become an independent commentator,
said, "I’m among those who are not voting this year.
"What is
there to vote for? All the political parties that are participating
are not ready for the polls and have little to offer voters."
At the University
of Zimbabwe in Harare, Brian Raftopoulos, professor of Development
Studies, observed, "While Zimbabweans are deeply concerned
about their eroding standards of living, they are - paradoxically
- increasingly resigned to the dominance of the incumbent government.
"Zimbabweans
are losing faith in democracy. Many prefer to remain outside of
either of the major political parties, due to the belief that party
competition leads to social conflict."
At an interdenominational
national prayer meeting held in Harare on February 13, to promote
a peaceful election, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Manicaland, Patrick
Mutume, asked, "Why do we allow those we give power to in turn
use that power to suppress us?
"We are
at fault because we put evil people into power. Why are we rewarding
[them]?"
Lamenting that
the country had fallen from being a beacon of hope at independence
in 1980, to becoming cowed without the freedom, justice or peace
that thousands died fighting for during the bitter Seventies war
of liberation, Bishop Mutume added, "We thought that by finishing
the struggle for independence we will get peace.
"Then why
are we still praying for peace and justice?"
*Marceline
Ndoro is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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