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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
Heading
for difficult choices in dire times
IRIN
News
February 14, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76748
Harare - Political violence
has been a traditional staple of Zimbabwean elections, but with
the ruling ZANU-PF party now split, next month's ballot could see
a whole new scale of trouble.
"Violence breeds
destruction of property, life and infrastructure, and we do not
want lives lost. We will stamp it out and nip it in the bud,"
police commissioner general Augustine Chihuri warned this week after
meeting senior police officers.
In a veiled threat to
the opposition, he added: "We are tired of people who complain
when they lose but endorse the results when they win. In any election
some win, others lose, and this should be accepted."
With Kenya's experience
of post-election violence fresh in people's minds, senior judges
Rita Makarau and Lawrence Kamocha added their voices to appeals
for peace during the voting on 29 March. Kamocha urged the police
to be impartial, and politicians to demonstrate determination to
fight violence during and after the polls.
Zimbabwe's opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has long complained about the
unfairness of the political contest, from restrictions on campaigning
to access to the media. Since the 2000 election when the MDC first
emerged, election observers have routinely condemned the organisation
of the ballot and the environment of intimidation.
A new element,
likely to make next month's election even edgier, is the decision
by Zimbabwe's former finance minister, Simba Makoni, to challenge
President Robert Mugabe, 83, as an independent candidate. This has
heightened tensions in ZANU-PF, where a post-Mugabe succession debate
has been simmering.
"The most vicious
violence could be the fights among former ZANU-PF allies, who have
been split into two factions: those supporting Makoni and those
supporting Mugabe," political commentator Paddington Japajapa
told IRIN.
"Even more worrying
is the fact that it is in ZANU-PF where you find former guerrillas
of the war of liberation, and there is the possibility that former
comrades in arms could turn their guns against each other."
Feeling
your pain?
Makoni,
57, told IRIN that he was opposed to any form of violence. "No
presidential candidate is worth dying for; certainly, no presidential
candidate is worth killing for. I appeal to all Zimbabweans, especially
the youth, not to be used by anybody to engage in violent behaviour."
The election
is being held against the backdrop of dire economic hardship. Japajapa
commented that the country's deep recession, reinforced by the cold
shoulder from Western donors, has served to heighten the drama around
the coming poll. The International Monetary Fund has estimated
Zimbabwe's inflation rate at 100,000 percent and still rising.
Unemployment is now over
80 percent, maternal mortality rates, and infant and under-five
deaths are all above threshold levels that should trigger international
concern. Although nutrition levels are not the lowest in the region,
only in Zimbabwe are the trends in "stunting" and "underweight"
deteriorating.
In announcing his candidature,
Makoni stated: "I share the agony and the anguish of all citizens
over the extreme hardships that we have all endured for nearly 10
years now. 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 prerequisite for change at other levels of national
endeavour."
Makoni was one of the
youngest ministers in Mugabe's first post-independence government
in 1980. He was appointed executive secretary of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) in 1984. After the shock of ZANU-PF's
near defeat in 2000 he was part of a group of technocrats drafted
into government, but fell out with Mugabe over economic policy and
resigned in 2002.
Rindai Chipfunde-Vava,
executive director of the pro-democracy Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), told IRIN that a rushed timetable
for the local council, legislative and presidential elections -
the first time they have been run simultaneously - was undermining
their credibility, despite a SADC-brokered
dialogue between MDC and ZANU-PF.
"Two days before
nomination courts sit throughout the country, none of the parties
has completed the final list of candidates ... We are going into
the elections before the SADC-brokered talks have seen the signing
of an agreement," said Chipfunde-Vava.
"We don't think
there is enough time to implement some of the agreed changes to
security and media laws that were agreed to under the [SADC]-mediated
talks."
Chipfunde-Vava said the
onus was now on the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), appointed
by Mugabe, to deliver a credible vote. However, with only six weeks
left before the ballot, it was still recruiting staff and battling
to find office space in some parts of the country.
Lovemore Madhuku,
chair of the rights lobby group the National
Constitutional Assembly, told IRIN that piecemeal amendments
to the constitution
would not deliver the required reforms for a free and fair poll.
"We are saying that Zimbabweans are participating in these
elections although they know that the elections are not legitimate."
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