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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
Challenger
to Mugabe in Zimbabwe
Barry Bearak, The New York Times
February 06, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/06/world/africa/06zimbabwe.html?_r=1&ref=africa&oref=slogin
Johannesburg—
A senior member of Zimbabwe's ruling party, Simba Makoni,
announced Tuesday that he would run for president against Robert
G. Mugabe, the man who has kept a mighty hold on power for nearly
30 years and presided over one of the world's most horrific
economic free falls.
Mr. Makoni, Zimbabwe's
former finance minister, said that though he would run as an independent
in the March 29 election, he had held "intensive consultations"
with fellow members of the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front, ZANU-PF, and others before deciding.
This is a significant
twist. Mr. Mugabe had been expected to coast to victory, especially
after the nation's main opposition group — the splintered
Movement for Democratic Change — failed last weekend to unite
behind one presidential candidate.
Mr. Mugabe, 83, may still
win handily in his bid for a sixth term. But Mr. Makoni, 57, represents
a credible rallying point for Zimbabwe's disaffected.
"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,"
Mr. Makoni said at a news conference. "I also share the widely
held view that these hardships are a result of failure of national
leadership," he said, and that change is necessary.
He did not identify those
hardships, though he might well have referred to an official inflation
rate of 26,470 percent, grocery shelves empty of bread and gas stations
without fuel.
Mr. Mugabe blames Britain
and other Western nations for Zimbabwe's economic woes, saying
these countries have punished his government for seizing land from
white farmers.
In the past decade, Mr.
Mugabe's best-known political opponent has been Morgan Tsvangirai,
the leader of the larger faction of the Movement for Democratic
Change. In 2000, a year after the movement was founded, it nearly
won control of Parliament. In 2002, Mr. Tsvangirai waged a strong
enough presidential race to force Mr. Mugabe to resort to what many
Western governments called widespread fraud and voter intimidation.
But the M.D.C. split
in two in 2005. A consensus seemed near recently, but talks collapsed
over which candidates would seek which seats in Parliament.
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