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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Election
campaigns go hi-tech
IRIN
News
March 04, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77128
Bulawayo - Savvy
text messaging and cheeky ring tones are the new face of cost-effective
political campaigning in Zimbabwe in the run up to the 29 March
election, despite the creakiness of country's cell phone networks.
"Call it an SMS
[short message service] craze if you like ... It's a simple, inexpensive
and effortless way of campaigning for candidates of one's choice,"
Aleck Ndlovu, a political activist, told IRIN.
"We need change
in our country and what we are doing is to encourage each other
[via text messages] to use our right to vote to achieve that change,"
said Nobuhle Dube, a resident of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest
city.
Simba Makoni, an independent
candidate who broke ranks with the ruling ZANU-PF party in February
by declaring his presidential bid, and Morgan Tsvangirai, leader
of the main group of the splintered Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), are President Robert Mugabe's chief opponents. The fourth
presidential hopeful is another independent, Langton Towungana.
"Vote for Simba",
Makoni's supporters SMS, while Tsvangirai's faithful ask, "Have
you not suffered enough? Morgan is the solution."
Picture messages with
Mugabe cartoons are a huge draw, but the most captivating novelty
is an anti-Mugabe ringtone based on a local song, which asks in
Shona: "How long will you vote for ZANU-PF?". The ringtone
has become a hit, according to Alfred Sibanda, who runs a small
electronic services café in Bulawayo.
"Alongside my main
business, I burn music ... [write music to CDs] and we get at least
15 people per day who want the ringtone uploaded to their phones,"
he said.
However, this may not
always be wise. "Some people have returned to us, requesting
that we remove it after clashing with government sympathisers,"
Sibanda commented.
In ZANU-PF circles, messages
extolling the party and Mugabe are doing the rounds. "Land
to the people. Vote for President Mugabe", says one. "Down
with the opposition", suggests another.
Political blogs are another
popular campaign communications mode. "My blog's feedback section
is always brimming with responses from those sympathetic to Mugabe,
Tsvangirai or Makoni, and some have sent me links to their blogs
... The network cuts across the political divide," said Busani
Moyo, another Bulawayo resident.
The polls are crucial
to Zimbabweans, as the almost dysfunctional economy has left them
with an inflation rate of around 100,000 percent and widespread
food shortages.
The recent endorsement
of Makoni by ZANU-PF heavyweight Dumiso Dabengwa and two other former
cabinet ministers has given the elections an interesting turn. John
Makumbe, an anti-ZANU-PF political scientist at the University
of Zimbabwe, said it had improved Makoni's chances, and "was
a major blow for Mugabe".
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