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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
Opposition
claim poll a "massive fraud"
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 24, 01-Apr-05)
By *Benedict
Unendoro in Harare
April 01, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_024_1_eng.txt
MDC leader gives followers
barely disguised signal to overthrow government.
Zimbabwe and the southern Africa region
has been plunged into deep crisis after opponents of President Robert
Mugabe conceded on April 1 that the ruling ZANU PF party was on
its way to a crushing two-thirds majority parliamentary election
victory.
However, Morgan Tsvangirai, leader
of the opposition MDC, said the victory had been achieved as a result
of massive and widespread electoral fraud by Mugabe and ZANU PF.
Tsvangirai gave a barely disguised signal to his followers to begin
extra-parliamentary action to topple a government that has presided
over seven years of economic collapse, widespread violence, massive
unemployment and inflation, hunger and spreading disease.
"These elections cannot be accepted
by anyone in their right mind," an angry Tsvangirai told reporters
in Harare. "This is disgusting massive fraud.
"I am asking people to defend their
right to vote. We have been using the legal route and that route
has failed. We are not going to use it this time."
Tsvangirai was referring to the last
parliamentary election in 2000 when, despite massive government
violence which resulted in many deaths and countless maimings among
the opposition, the MDC won 57 of the 120 parliamentary seats. In
subsequent actions in the supreme court, more than twenty ZANU PF
victories were overturned as fraudulent, giving the MDC a parliamentary
majority.
But the supreme court verdicts were
held up for five years in the appeal court, staffed by judges loyal
to Mugabe and who had been given properties confiscated from white
commercial farmers in the post-2000 anarchic government-inspired
upheavals. Those electoral appeals are still stuck in the supreme
court and, following the March 31 general election, have become
null and void.
What Tsvangirai plans in place of the
legal route, which many of his top officials previously acceded
to only reluctantly, is not yet clear. One near-certainty is that
MDC MPs will not this time take their seats or salaries in a parliament
seen as totally subverted and corrupted by Mugabe and ZANU PF.
Tsvangirai, widely criticised for his
weak leadership, may have to consent to the calls of leaders of
civil society for an attempted revolution similar to those of Ukraine,
Georgia and Kyrgyzstan. Prime among these civic voices has been
that of Pius Ncube, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's
second city, who predicted the poll would be heavily rigged.
Before Easter Sunday mass last weekend
in Bulawayo Cathedral, the Archbishop said, "I hope that people
get so disillusioned that they really organise and kick him [Mugabe]
out by a non-violent, popular mass uprising ... People should pluck
up just a bit of courage and stand up against him and chase him
away."
Tsvangirai admitted the impending defeat
at a moment on April 1 when the MDC had won 30 of the first 38 constituencies
to declare. But they were all safe opposition seats in the three
major urban centres of Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare. His MDC advisers
decided they must pre-empt the final outcome when party supporters
reported massive intimidation and ballot stuffing in the key rural
areas of Mashonaland and Masvingo, the heartland of traditional
Shona tribal support for ZANU PF.
In an electorate of 5.7 million, some
one to two million "zombie votes" of dead people still on the ZANU
PF-controlled electoral register are believed to have been cast.
Among many other electoral fraud weapons,
human rights organisations, opposition supporters and media analysts
said the application of sheer fear during this election campaign
was the most powerful and subtle, especially in Shona rural areas.
Poverty-stricken peasants were warned
by communal chiefs that their agricultural plots would be repossessed
if a single MDC vote was found in the ballot boxes.
It may be a mystery to the outside
world how ZANU PF can impose such a draconian hold on its rural
people. It is doubtful that the majority of them support ZANU PF,
but, more than their urban relatives, they have borne the brunt
of Mugabe's mismanagement of the country. It is in these rural areas
that such necessities as bread, sugar and the staple maize are either
available through ZANU PF officials or not obtainable at all.
Until last year, international non-government
organisations such as Oxfam, Care International and World Vision
donated basic food for survival, but they were expelled by Mugabe
who said they were supporting the MDC, leaving the government as
the sole guardian and distributor of food supplies.
During the last election campaign these
rural areas were subjected to heavy intimidation and violence by
ZANU PF men who had also coerced the same population during the
1970s war of liberation against Zimbabwe's former white Rhodesian
government.
That war and the events of 2000 are
still implanted in the folk memories of the rural people of Shona
tribal lands, where the majority of Zimbabweans live. Intimidation
was as a rife as ever during the election campaign, but it went
unnoticed by foreign observer teams and journalists who hung around
the cities rather than penetrating the less comfortable and more
dangerous countryside.
In Shona rural areas, ZANU PF commissars
had long ago divided the people into cells of 500 each and placed
one polling station in the territory of each cell. All the ZANU
PF militants and the Green Bombers, Mugabe's personal storm troopers
from the National Youth Militia, then had to do was to tell each
and every largely illiterate peasant, whose traditional loyalty
is to the local chief, to go to the polling station in their cell
or ward. The chilling message delivered, out of sight and earshot
of election observers and the foreign press, was that the community
as a whole would bear responsibility if a single MDC vote was found
in the ballot box.
The implication was that extreme violence
would follow on the whole community from the Green Bombers and ZANU
PF organisers if an MDC vote appeared. Control was easy because
vote counting was carried out at the polling station under pro-Mugabe
police and army officers. Among other threats available to chiefs
and headmen, who allocate communal lands for agriculture, was withdrawal
of plots essential for bare survival of the peasantry.
Many details of the massive fraud employed
by Mugabe will emerge in coming weeks, but the above was the main
method, long planned, by which he secured his huge victory.
"Five-and-half years of savagery have
left a legacy of fear," said Andrew Moyse, head of Zimbabwe's Media
Monitoring Service, one of the country's few surviving human rights
organisations. "Violence this time only needed to be implied. If
you beat a dog every day for five years there comes a time when
all you need to do is show him the stick and he will do as he is
told."
By late April 1, ZANU PF was well on
its way to a two-thirds majority which will allow Mugabe to change
the constitution and strengthen his iron rule. Meanwhile, the South
African parliamentary observer delegation, the most influential
of the observer groups permitted to enter Zimbabwe, was preparing
to issue a statement declaring the 2005 Zimbabwe parliamentary election
free and fair, as instructed in advance by South African president
Thabo Mbeki.
*Benedict Unendoro is the pseudonym
of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.
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