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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
Simba
Makoni: Zimbabwe's roaring lion?
Joseph
Winter, BBC News
February
05, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7228205.stm
Simba Makoni,
a senior member of Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu-PF party, has announced
he is to challenge Robert Mugabe for president.
With a PhD in
chemistry, his supporters say he has the magic formula to reverse
Zimbabwe's economic collapse and end its political stalemate.
The mild-mannered,
jovial man has long been seen as a possible compromise candidate,
with backers both in Zanu-PF, as well as plenty of admirers in the
opposition.
He has variously
been described as a moderniser, a technocrat and a "young turk".
Opposition MP
Priscilla Misihairabwi told the BBC News website that Mr Makoni
was very courageous to publicly challenge Mr Mugabe from within
the system.
He could be living
up to his name, Simba, which means lion in Swahili.
Ms Misihairabwi
also says that Mr Makoni is a man of principles.
The then finance
minister stood up to President Robert Mugabe over economic policy
in 2002 and was sacked for his trouble.
Mr Makoni's supporters
note that he has a good understanding of orthodox economics and
he comes from the party which delivered independence from Britain
in 1980 and which does not want to relinquish power.
He could appeal
to those voters who are desperate for some improvement in their
daily lives but do not quite trust the opposition.
His soft tone
could also help heal the country's bitter divisions and end the
years of political lambast and name-calling.
But his critics
dismiss him as a political lightweight within his party and say
he will struggle to compete against Mr Mugabe, who will be his main
opponent in the March elections.
He was brought
in as finance minister in 2000 to restore relations with donors
and the business community but failed to change Mr Mugabe's policies.
He was sacked
18 months later after calling for a devaluation of the currency
to try and boost exports.
Mr Mugabe said
those who wanted a devaluation were "economic saboteurs".
Mr Makoni responded
by cheerfully introducing himself as "Saboteur".
But until he announced
his candidature for the elections, he remained a member of Zanu-PF's
policy-making body, the politburo and so must share some of the
blame for the country's economic woes.
He nevertheless
tried his best to distance himself from the crisis.
"Let me confirm
that I share the agony and anguish of all citizens over the extreme
hardships that we all have endured for nearly 10 years now," he
said.
And despite saying
he would have preferred to stand as a Zanu-PF candidate, he strongly
criticised its leaders.
"I also share
the widely-held view that these hardships are a result of failure
of national leadership and that change at that level is a pre-requisite
for change at other levels of national endeavour."
But he is believed
to have the backing of Zanu-PF heavyweight Solomon Mujuru, whose
wife Joyce is vice-president.
Zimbabwean political
analyst John Makumbe said that if the former army chief is indeed
backing Mr Makoni, then the Zanu-PF vote would be split in the 29
March election - boosting the chances of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change, which is also fielding two candidates.
"This is a significant
development," he said. "We are beginning to see a glimmer of light
at the end of the tunnel."
At just 57, he
comes from a different generation to the octogenarians currently
running the country and its ruling party.
While the party
old-guard were fighting the 1970s guerrilla war of independence,
Mr Makoni was studying chemistry in Britain.
But he also found
time to represent Zanu in Europe and clearly made an impression.
When the first
post-independence government was formed, he was appointed deputy
minister of agriculture at just 30.
Over the next
four years he served as minister of energy and of youth before abruptly
leaving government.
"He was too hot
to handle," one long-time associate told the BBC.
"He was too clever
and too young for the older members of the party. They wanted him
out of the way."
Mr Makoni went
on to become Executive Secretary of the Southern African Development
Community, (SADC), a job which he says required "a fine balance
between high principles and pragmatism".
Ms Misihairabwi
says that Mr Makoni is also untainted by allegations of corruption
or scandal.
"He is very approachable
and ready to laugh - unlike Mugabe," she said.
"There is a real
excitement about this but whether that will translate into votes
is another question."
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