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Analysts,
exiled Zimbabweans, see no hope in looming elections
Tendai Maphosa, Voice of America (VOA)
February 18, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-02-18-voa18.cfm
Next month Zimbabwe holds
presidential, parliamentary and local elections - the first time
all three polls have been held together. But as Tendai Maphosa reports
from London, analysts and exiles do not believe the poll will bring
about the change the country needs for it to get out of the political
and economic crisis it has been mired in for years.
With the elections only
a few weeks away there is already widespread pessimism that the
elections will not bring about the change Zimbabwe so desperately
needs. Among those expressing concern is the Britain's Africa Minister,
Mark Malloch-Brown, who said the odds are against a free and fair
election in Zimbabwe.
Alex Vines, who heads
the Africa Program at the London-based think-tank, Chatham House,
echoed Malloch-Brown's sentiments. Vines is well acquainted with
Zimbabwe having worked there during the 1980s. He told VOA that
while the voting itself may be free this time, Zimbabweans remain
so affected by the violence and intimidation that marred past elections,
the result of this election is unlikely to reflect the electorate's
real choices.
"I think it [is
going to] be difficult given what's been happening in recent years
in Zimbabwe for a free and fair election; and the days themselves
maybe more free but [given] the context of the elections [it] is
very difficult to see how it will be an open, democratic and fear-free
election," said Vines.
Since 2000, the contest
has been between Mr. Mugabe's party and the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) led by Morgan Tsvangirai. The MDC came close to winning
the 2000 elections but has since been severely weakened by violence,
arrests on trumped-up charges as well as internal bickering.
But earlier
this month the 84-year-old Zimbabwean leader's former minister of
finance, Simba Makoni, announced
he will challenge the president as an independent. Until he
announced his run for the presidency, Makoni was a senior member
of the ruling Zanu-PF led by the president.
Vines notes Makoni's
candidacy is an interesting development. But Dewa Mavhinga, a Zimbabwean
working with the Zimbabwe Human Rights Forum in London, describes
the excitement around Makoni's candidacy as overblown.
"The significance
or otherwise of Makoni's candidature would have come in his ability
to split Zanu-PF," said Mavhinga. "But if he fails to
draw heavyweights from Zanu-PF then he is not significant at all.
As he is an independent without a political party or a grassroots
base, he is unlikely to unseat President Mugabe in the forthcoming
poll."
The crisis in Zimbabwe
has seen an estimated three million people - a quarter of the total
population - leave the country for political and economic reasons.
The most popular destinations have been neighboring South Africa,
Botswana and the United Kingdom. Launching his election manifesto
earlier this month, Makoni called on those abroad to come home and
vote. Mavhinga said it is unlikely Zimbabweans outside southern
Africa will heed the call.
"People, particularly
in the diaspora, which would be made up of fairly middle class and
informed people are very aware of the shortcomings of the electoral
process and therefore would not put much faith in the process as
to travel all the way from the UK, New Zealand the U.S. to go and
vote," added Mavhinga.
There seems to be a consensus
that the opposition has to participate in elections even though
the electoral process is heavily tilted in favor of Mr. Mugabe's
party. Chatham House's Alex Vines says it is important for the opposition
to participate otherwise it becomes irrelevant.
"They are
not unique in this regard, this is a conundrum that opposition parties
more regularly have found themselves in Africa but the history of
parties that completely boycott is actually more grim than those
that actually try and contest and have some space for negotiation
and relevance," he said.
Alex Magaisa is a Zimbabwean
lecturer at the University of Kent. He told VOA that the upcoming
elections are crucial for the country's recovery and he hopes that
the prevailing hardships may push the rural electorate, normally
intimidated into voting for Mr. Mugabe, into rejecting him this
time. But, he points out that the splintered opposition might hand
Mr. Mugabe victory.
"If Mugabe wins,
which is quite likely, there will be no progress, Zimbabwe will
continue to be a pariah state and that is the biggest obstacle,"
said Magaisa. "The question that we are faced with is not whether
we change the system of government or democracy in the country,
I think it's whether we change the face of the national leadership."
Magaisa added a change
in leadership would unlock a lot of possibilities for Zimbabwe in
terms of economic recovery and the democratic process. Most analysts
note that if past elections are anything to go by, Mr. Mugabe, who
has been in power since independence in 1980, will be celebrating
another victory. And exiled Zimbabweans, who have fled his regime,
will still be waiting for the change that means they can go home.
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