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ZIMBABWE:
Tsvangirai loses election appeal as opposition woes mount
IRIN News
February 15, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51737
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), already
wracked by internal division, is finding itself more isolated in
the region and at home.
The party's disputed leader Morgan Tsvangirai has lost yet another
round in his battle to overturn the results of the 2002 presidential
election, which President Robert Mugabe maintains he won fairly.
At the time of the 2002 poll the MDC was in its ascendancy, but
when the votes were finally tallied, Mugabe had scored 56.2 percent
to Tsvangirai's 41.9, with his strongest showing predictably in
the rural areas, a traditional support base. Western and local election
observers condemned the ballot as neither free nor fair.
On Tuesday the Supreme Court dismissed an application by Tsvangirai
that it hear his appeal for nullification of the 2002 results. This
followed a High Court ruling in 2005 against Tsvangirai's bid to
overturn the poll verdict, for which the presiding judge gave no
reasons until months after his ruling.
This effectively hamstrung Tsvangirai from filing an appeal, as
appeals have to be filed within 15 days of a judgement being handed
down, his spokesman William Bango told IRIN. A second part of Tsvangirai's
challenge to the election results was yet to be concluded, Bango
added.
The court ruling was yet another blow for the beleaguered Tsvangirai,
currently fighting a leadership battle with a 'rebel' MDC faction,
led by vice-president Gibson Sibanda. The labour-backed MDC's bitter
wrangle over participation in last year's senate election split
the party in two, with each faction trying to expel or suspend its
opponents.
They will hold two separate congresses this year, which analysts
say is likely to lead to a finalisation of the split. Meanwhile,
smaller parties have emerged, further confusing the opposition political
landscape, say analysts.
Zimbabwe Electoral Support Network chairman Reginald Machaba-Hove
told IRIN that "the people of Zimbabwe deserve to have viable political
parties, including strong opposition parties, to help solve the
dire problems in the country, and not a plethora of smaller opposition
parties".
"We don't think that that is providing real choice to the people
of Zimbabwe, it tends to weaken the opposition and confuse the electorate,"
he added.
Analyst Brian Raftopoulos noted that many of the new political parties
were formed by "ex [ruling party] ZANU-PF dissenters, people like
[former information minister] Jonathan Moyo, who have no place to
go within the MDC and still have links with the ruling party - many
are an extension of ZANU-PF".
"They have little credibility, they are splinter groups that are
likely to remain marginal," he concluded.
The MDC, meanwhile, appears to have divided along geographical and
ethnic lines. "Although the reasons for the split were not fundamentally
about ethnic tensions, the reconfiguration of the factions definitely
has an ethnic dimension," Raftopoulos noted.
The split would "debilitate both factions of the MDC, as the strength
of the party was in its unity, at present neither faction has a
strategy to confront Mugabe and on their own they lack a national
reach in terms of support, as one is based mainly in Matabeleland
[in the south] and the other has support in other parts of the country".
To add to Tsvangirai's woes, the MDC appears to be increasingly
isolated within the region.
Recent comments by South African President Thabo Mbeki indicated
that he had grown increasingly weary of trying to resolve Zimbabwe's
political crisis. He told the South African Broadcast Corporation
last week that in 2004 his 'quiet diplomacy' policy towards Zimbabwe
had almost resulted in a deal between ZANU-PF and the MDC on a new
constitution.
"They were actually involved in negotiating a new constitution for
Zimbabwe, and they did and they completed it ... they gave me a
copy initialled by everybody, done. So we thought the next step
then must be to say where do we take this process. But then ...
new problems arose among themselves. So we watch the situation and
to the extent that we can help in future, we will," Mbeki said.
"They asked us to assist, to mend relations among themselves. It
didn't work. We tried to intervene but I think the rupture had gone
too far," he added.
To this, Tsvangirai's spokesman Bango replied that outside assistance
was secondary to internal Zimbabwean initiatives to end the crisis.
"Whatever African countries may try to do should be complimentary
to efforts here at home," he said.
Raftopoulos, however, said Mbeki's comments indicated "a sense of
growing frustration that his quiet diplomacy policy has produced
no fruits, the new wait and see approach [adopted by South Africa]
is a result of the failure of his [quiet diplomacy] efforts".
Last week Tsvangirai and several MDC leaders were deported from
Zambia when they met in Livingstone, a tourist town on the border
with Zimbabwe.
Raftopoulos said the deportation was "confirmation of the fact that
since the crisis began in 2000, the region has been behind Mugabe".
The travails of the MDC - the current leadership battle and split
in the party, coupled with the emergence of smaller opposition parties,
a lack of democratic space in Zimbabwe and eroding regional support
for efforts to find a solution to the country's political crisis
- could see a changed political landscape, Raftopoulos said.
"I think opposition politics is going into a hiatus now, it will
be a very dark and slow period in terms of opposition politics.
I think civic movements are also in the process of reorganising
right now, they are very much pushed on the defensive. On the whole,
even though Mugabe has problems internationally, at home the opposition
presents him with few difficulties," Raftopoulos concluded.
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