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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
Third
Way attracts followers
IRIN
News
February 23, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76900
Harare - Who
is behind the presidential bid of Simba Makoni remains a mystery,
but the campaign of Zimbabwe's former finance minister says it has
been able to field candidates in most constituencies for the general
elections next month.
Although the overstretched
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) is still computing the final
list of candidates in the four separate polls to be run on 29 March,
the Makoni camp claims it has managed to field candidates or strike
alliances in all the 210 parliamentary constituencies and for 60
senatorial seats.
By contrast, the ruling
ZANU-PF party's campaign has been dogged by trouble. There have
been reports of candidates being imposed on some constituencies,
of individuals openly defying the party and registering themselves,
and of ZANU-PF members defecting to join up under Makoni's independent
banner. Several cabinet ministers and MPs were turfed out in the
party primaries, an indication of the level of disgruntlement.
In the past few weeks,
ZANU-PF provincial party chairmen have been appearing on television
to publicly distance themselves from Makoni, 57. They have included
the leaders of Manicaland Province, in the east, where Makoni hails
from, and Mashonaland East Province, in the northeast, the stronghold
of political baron Gen Solomon Mujuru, who is widely tipped to support
Makoni's political strategy.
"What has
happened is absolutely disgraceful," President Robert Mugabe
said on 21 February in a live broadcast, during which he lashed
out at the man once considered his protégé. "So
I have compared
[Makoni] to a prostitute; a prostitute could have stood up and
claimed she had many men in MDC [the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change] and others in ZANU-PF."
Makoni was one of the
youngest ministers in Mugabe's first post-independence government
in 1980, before quitting a few years later. After the shock of ZANU-PF's
near defeat by the MDC in 2000 he was part of a group of technocrats
drafted in to help re-energise the government, but fell out with
Mugabe over economic policy and resigned in 2002.
Although acknowledging
support from within ZANU-PF, Makoni has insisted he was not a stalking
horse for any political interests. "I'm nobody's man, I'm real;
I'm Simba Makoni, I cannot be used by anybody," he said in
a press conference last week.
Makoni's entrance in
the race is likely to hurt the MDC - the official opposition that
has been split into two feuding factions since 2005. Philip Moyo,
a resident of the capital, Harare, told IRIN he had voted for the
labour-backed MDC ever since it emerged to take on ZANU-PF in 2000.
"But as time moved
on, unease and uncertainty began to creep in ... When their attempts
to reunite were dashed after the two factions fought over how to
share 'safe' constituencies, I gave up on politics until the emergence
of Makoni. The opposition has been taking the people of Zimbabwe
for granted for close to 10 years now, and the appearance of Makoni
is like a fresh breath of air."
ZEC officials
told IRIN that after Makoni announced
he was standing against Mugabe, there was a 10-fold increase in
newly registered voters. The winner of the 29 March ballot needs
over 50 percent of the vote to avoid a second round run-off with
his closest rival.
New
energy
Makoni's
bid has been endorsed by the smaller of the two MDC factions, led
by Arthur Mutambara. "Makoni has put national interests ahead
of personal ambition, unlike some pretenders in the political arena.
That is why some of us are prepared to put on hold our presidential
ambitions to support the national cause," Mutambara told IRIN.
Makoni's emergence
has been dubbed the 'Third Way' scenario - an alliance between reformists
in ZANU-PF and MDC designed to pull Zimbabwe out of its deep political
and economic crises, in which inflation
has hit over 100,000 percent and only two people in 10 can find
work.
Publisher Trevor
Ncube was one of the first to expound on the idea. Writing in one
of his publications last
week, Ncube said: "The Third Way to me is a way of thinking
that rejects the mediocrity offered by the MDC ... My thinking was,
and still is, that under ZANU-PF our society has collapsed and we
need a new beginning that rejects ZANU-PF corruption, oppression,
arrogance and mismanagement, and offers Zimbabweans an opportunity
to dream again."
Ncube went on to endorse
Makoni, saying: "The choice between the MDC and ZANU-PF under
the current circumstances is no choice at all. Makoni's decision
to stand as a presidential candidate in the elections at the end
of March is a huge personal sacrifice that now must be supported
by all Zimbabweans who desire peaceful change."
But ZANU-PF's liberation
war veterans, who led the campaign to have Mugabe endorsed as the
party's candidate, say they still stand by the veteran president,
who turns 84 this week.
Jabulani Sibanda, chairman
of the group, said despite reports that some of his members had
abandoned the association, they still supported Mugabe. "I
think the so-called war veterans who have joined Makoni are the
ones who were in the MDC. We still stand by our president in the
face of sell-outs and counter revolutionaries, whose plans we were
aware of all along."
Information
minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu also threw his weight behind Mugabe.
"The people forming alliances are people driven by political
immaturity and not ideological cohesion; they are reacting to the
hardships that we have experienced. But of course, that is their
democratic right."
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