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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
Mugabe
faces first real challenge as former minister launches bid to take
presidency
Basildon
Peta, The Independent (UK)
February 06, 2008
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this article online
Robert Mugabe
is facing the first major internal challenge to his leadership in
20 years after his former finance minister, Simba Makoni, 57, said
he would run against the President in next month's elections.
The decision complicates
what was looking like an electoral procession for Mr Mugabe after
the opposition failed to agree a united front at the weekend, leaving
him facing a weak and divided field.
Mr Makoni ended
weeks of speculation yesterday by announcing he would stand as an
independent against his one-time political mentor. "I share the
agony and anguish of all citizens over the extreme hardships we
have all endured for nearly 10 years," he told reporters. "I also
share the widely held view that these hardships are a result of
failure of national leadership."
Mr Makoni said
that he and an "overwhelming majority" of Zanu-PF members were disappointed
that a congress in December had failed to change the party's leadership.
The former minister's strongest backer appears to be Solomon Mujuru,
a former general and leading member of the ruling party's politburo.
General Mujuru, husband of the vice-president, Joyce Mujuru, has
been consistently linked with attempts to topple Mr Mugabe.
The President
had summoned Mr Makoni to the State House in Harare last week to
confront him over any potential challenge but sources said that
the former minister had denied any imminent move.
Mr Makoni could
profit from widespread Zanu-PF disillusionment with the 84- year-old
leader and opposition supporters enraged by the bickering in the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The two factions of the MDC,
led by Arthur Mutambara and Morgan Tsvangirai, plan to fight the
elections separately.
Tafirei Madiro,
a company executive in Harare, was typical of disgruntled opposition
supporters in welcoming Mr Makoni's bid. "In fact I was not going
to even bother voting for any of those factions," he said. "Neither
were many of my friends. But Makoni's emergence has given the nation
an alternative viable choice."
Mr Makoni is backed
by several influential Zanu officials who wanted new leadership
at the party's special congress in December but were thwarted by
Mr Mugabe after he railroaded through his nomination without debate.
The former minister said he would have wanted to run on a ruling
party ticket but found that door shut for him. Party insiders say
General Mujuru's support guarantees Mr Makoni a substantial backing
from the military which has been the backbone of Mr Mugabe's rule.
"His move opens
up this whole electoral game," Eddie Cross, a senior MDC official,
said. "He must have major support in Zanu. It seems there was a
lot of preparation in all this. It can't be a sudden thing."
Analysts say shortages
of food, foreign currency, fuel and the world's highest inflation
rate officially pegged at 26,000 per cent present the biggest challenge
to Mr Mugabe's rule.
Mr Makoni had
left President Mugabe's first post-independence government for four
years before leaving to go into business. Mr Mugabe appointed him
finance minister in 2000. He resigned two years later over policy
differences with the President but remained in Zanu's top decision-making
body, the Soviet-style politburo, until he broke ranks yesterday.
He is well-respected
internationally and during his spell as finance minister he angered
Mr Mugabe by frequently meeting officials of the British and other
Western embassies who held Mr Makoni in high esteem.
This was after
Mr Mugabe started his campaign to seize farms from white farmers.
His bodyguards were said to have compiled a secret dossier of Mr
Makoni's visits to the then UK High Commissioner, Peter Longworth.
From Leeds
University to the fight for leadership
While
Robert Mugabe and his Zanu-PF old guard were fighting their liberation
war in the 1970s, Simba Makoni was busy gaining a BSc and PhD in
chemistry at Leeds University. At the same time, he was networking
and lobbying for Zanu in Europe. At independence in 1980, he was
appointed deputy agriculture minister, aged just 30. He later served
as minister of energy but quit four years later, resurfacing as
head of the Southern Africa Development Community. Nine years as
the region's most senior civil servant in Botswana gained him international
exposure as world attention focused on ending apartheid in South
Africa. In the early 1990s, he ran a state-owned newspaper group
in Zimbabwe before being readmitted to the Mugabe inner circle and
appointed finance minister in 2000. He pledged tougher fiscal discipline
to restore relations with external donors but in 2001 he admitted
the economy was in crisis. "I would have to be foolish to deny what
is evident to everybody," he said. In 2002 he resigned over a "policy
difference" with political colleagues. His call for a devaluation
of the Zimbabwe dollar earned him Mr Mugabe's disapproval as an
"economic saboteur".
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