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Food
stockpiling as people fear the 'Kenya syndrome'
IRIN News
January 09, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76161
Post-election violence
in Kenya is creating pre-election nervousness among Zimbabwe's voters
ahead of parliamentary and presidential elections in March, and
people are beginning to stockpile food in the event of any possible
unrest.
Donald Dombo, a government
employee, said he saw most of his "colleagues in the civil
service starting to hoard food and firewood in their homes in case
the Kenyan syndrome of violence spreads to Zimbabwe after the elections".
He told IRIN that, "I
am planning to take my family to the countryside because I fear
that if there are to be any violent demonstrations, then they would
be held in urban areas."
The scheduled elections
will take place at a time when international donor agencies have
predicted more than a third of Zimbabwe's population, or 4.1 million
people, would require emergency food assistance, so food hoarding
would likely add pressure to the country's already acute food shortages.
Zimbabwe is suffering
the world's highest inflation rate, officially cited at 8,000 percent,
but estimated by independent economists to be running at about 25,000
percent.
President Robert Mugabe,
83, who has been in power since Zimbabwe won its independence from
Britain in 1980, has been nominated as the ruling ZANU-PF party's
candidate for the presidency; the main opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, (MDC) remains divided.
Police commissioner Augustine
Chihuri warned against any political violence, before, during and
after the elections at a function on Tuesday for Zimbabwean police
officers seconded to UN duties during the electoral period.
"Let those who want
to cause violence be warned that a chaotic situation will not be
allowed. Let Zimbabwe not emulate what we see elsewhere, getting
power through violent means. I am saying this because we are approaching
elections," he said.
"It is disturbing
to read about the huge number of lives being lost not only in Africa
but in other countries around the world," Chihuri said, apparently
referring to Kenya, where more than 500 people have been killed
since the disputed 27 December election.
Talks
on a knife edge
Talks between Mugabe's
ZANU-PF and opposition parties, sponsored by the Southern Africa
Development Community (SADC), were in danger of being derailed after
the MDC's founding president and leader of one of the party's factions,
Morgan Tsvangirai, accused the government of reneging on an agreed
transitional constitution to be implemented before elections.
In return, opposition
parties did not oppose a constitutional amendment increasing the
number of elected legislators from 120 to 210 and reducing the presidential
term from six to five years, or a clause stipulating that should
the newly elected president be unable to complete his term in office,
parliament would sit as an electoral college to elect a new head
of state.
The composition of the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), which overseas the electoral
process, was part of the agreement. "An unhelpful development
has begun to creep in and we are deadlocked on key issues that should
enable us to cross the bridge into a new era. ZANU-PF has begun
to backtrack on some of these agreed points and is going it alone,"
Tsvangirai said in a statement to IRIN.
Tsvangirai said the concessions
were made in the spirit of the talks and with the expectation that
this would be reciprocated in the reconstitution of the ZEC, and
that elections would be held under a new transitional constitution,
agreed to by both the ruling party and the MDC's two factions. Such
an eventuality would have delayed the constitutionally scheduled
March elections later this year.
But at the recently held
ZANU-PF extraordinary congress, which endorsed Mugabe as ZANU-PF's
presidential candidate, Mugabe said, "Let me repeat, elections
will be held in March as per our constitution. If any political
parties are not ready for elections then that is their problem."
Tsvangirai told IRIN:
"We settled on a transitional constitution, following assurances
that the agreement would be implemented before the next election,
but ZANU-PF is now against the spirit and content of that agreement,
insisting instead that the transitional constitution can only be
implemented after the election. That is unacceptable."
False
election
Tsvangirai said despite
agreement that an independent electoral commission would delineate
new constituency boundaries, register voters and prevent military,
police and intelligence personnel from occupying key electoral positions,
the government had appointed senior officials to head the ZEC and
had ordered them to mark new constituency boundaries without consulting
opposition parties.
"Mugabe and ZANU-PF
want a false election and if we become part of it we will become
a danger to ourselves," Tsvangirai said.
Retired army officer
and chairman of the ZEC, George Chiweshe, told the state-controlled
newspaper, the Sunday Mail, that the electoral commission had completed
the delimitation of ward and constituency boundaries throughout
the country.
"What is left is
to polish up the preliminary report, which we will soon present
to the president," Chiweshe told the Sunday paper. "The
focus is on the elections being held in March, as this is when the
presidential election will be held."
Asked whether the exercise
could have waited for the completion of the SADC negotiations, Chiweshe
said: "But we don't work like that. We simply consider the
law, and we know that the harmonisation of the elections has been
captured in the law accordingly. If any changes are to be made,
they should be reflected in the law."
The SADC talks are being
brokered by South African President Thabo Mbeki, who was mandated
by the SADC in March 2007 to find a solution to Zimbabwe's economic
and political decline.
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