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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
I'll
beat Robert Mugabe, says former ally
Peta Thornycroft, The Telegraph
February 29, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/02/28/wzim128.xml
Robert Mugabe is to blame
for the suffering of the Zimbabwean people, his former ally and
main rival for the presidency has said.
Simba Makoni, 57, served
in President Mugabe's government from the moment the country won
independence from Britain in 1980.
But his decision
last month to challenge Mr Mugabe in the March 29 polls reflects
a growing dissatisfaction among leading figures in the ruling Zanu-PF
party, who have grown tired of the 84-year-old president and balk
at his determination to remain in his post as the country rapidly
disintegrates.
"Zimbabwe is in
the condition it is in because of a failure of leadership,"
said Mr Makoni, in an interview with The Daily Telegraph.
Mr Makoni, who
will run as an independent candidate after he was expelled
from Zanu-PF for daring to challenge the president, said that
this realization had come to him over several years.
"There was not a
'St Paul on the road to Damascus' awakening," he said. "It
wasn't an event, it didn't just happen, it was going on as the situation
evolved - that this is not the correct way for our people."
With an estimated
four million Zimbabweans needing food aid, and with inflation
officially running at more than 100,000 per cent, Mr Makoni
predicted he would win by a landslide.
"We will win resoundingly,
by 70 per cent plus," he said. "The people who are supporting
me in Zanu-PF and in other quarters, agree with me that the country
is ripe for change at the highest level, that the country needs
to take a different direction, a positive direction."
The destruction of Zimbabwe's
economy dates from 2000, when Mr Mugabe began seizing white-owned
farms.
Mr Makoni is calling
for an end to race-based policies.
"What we had in
Zimbabwe in 1980 was a national government, we had people from different
parties and different ethnic groups. We offered the African continent,
if not the world, national reconciliation, so I am merely reactivating
those values."
But whatever a candidate's
vision, winning an election in Zimbabwe is not just a matter of
crosses on ballot papers. Mr Mugabe is widely regarded as having
stolen the last poll in 2002 - and the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) believes that a fair ballot is impossible.
With the ruling Zanu-PF
having control over the media and police, the MDC is participating
in the elections only under protest. A new constitution that would
have changed the political climate was recently agreed but Mr Mugabe
announced the election before it could be implemented.
Mr Makoni's campaign
alleges it has been victim to "dirty tricks". He was unable
to leave Harare to campaign in rural areas yesterday because registration
plates for his vehicles were not available. Meanwhile, his printers
had supposedly run out of paper to produce fliers.
"I wish and hope
and expect this election will be free and fair," Mr Makoni
said. He added, however, that he had no access to the state television
broadcaster or to the national daily newspapers.
"I respect our president.
Up to Feb 5 [when Mr Makoni formally announced his candidacy] we
had a good, cordial relationship. I don't know what he feels now."
So what of the
comments Mr Mugabe has made since then, comparing
him to a prostitute and a frog? "I am puzzled," replied
Mr Makoni. "You had best ask him about that."
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