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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Emboldened
rivals square up to Mugabe
Alec
Russell, The Financial Times (UK)
March
16, 2008
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/26ac1490-f384-11dc-b6bc-0000779fd2ac.html
In the darkened provincial
hall, the audience of 40-50 Zimbabweans could hardly see the man
on the stage who was claiming to have come to liberate them from
President Robert Mugabe's autocratic rule. Moments before
he was due to speak, one of Zimbabwe's rolling power cuts
had hit the region. Nervous spectators speculated it had been timed
to undermine the appearance of the speaker, Simba Makoni, a former
finance minister and one-time stalwart of the ruling Zanu PF party.
"Businessmen cannot buy goods from wholesalers without giving
a kickback," said the first to his feet, a haggard man in a
tatty safari suit. "To drive I have to bribe a policeman. To
get water I have to bribe someone from the city council. Such is
the state of corruption in our country. Once in power how will you
remove this?" "Foreign investors are afraid of investing
in this country," said a second. "If you are elected,
how will you attract foreign business? How do you envisage engaging
international countries so we become again part of the global village?"
The questions might seem
run-of-the-mill given the parlous situation of Zimbabwe after 28
years of Mr Mugabe's rule: inflation exceeds 100,000 per cent;
headteachers earn the equivalent of US$18 a month and supermarkets
lack all but the most basic goods. But this was not a forum for
Zimbabwean exiles in London or Johannesburg, strongholds of the
several million estimated to have fled deteriorating conditions
in their homeland. This was the central town of Masvingo, traditionally
a bastion of Mugabe support, and most of the audience until recently
regarded themselves as Zanu PF supporters. "I'm coming
to say let's join together, let's get Zimbabwe working
again," Mr Makoni told them to shouts of Simba. "People
in rural areas still have the idea that there is a hidden camera
in the ballot box. Those of you who live in towns, go home and tell
your rural relations they are free to vote."
As Mr Mugabe, 84, seeks
another presidential term at elections on March 29, his record is
under open attack as never before. Morgan Tsvangirai, the veteran
leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, is touring
the country addressing fervent rallies, calling for a clear-out
of Zanu PF. While Mr Makoni's campaign has less overt support
than the MDC leader's, his defection has clearly shaken Mr
Mugabe's inner circle. Few senior party officials have publicly
endorsed Mr Makoni, but his aides insist that privately he has the
backing of many more, who will direct their constituents on polling
day to vote against the president and also try to block skulduggery.
Outwardly undaunted, Mr Mugabe is flying across the country by helicopter
addressing rallies of bussed-in supporters, painting his rivals
as stooges of the west, in particular Britain, the old colonial
power. They want to return Zimbabwe to the control of whites, he
maintains. Only he is truly interested in "empowering"
black Zimbabweans.
Such nationalist rhetoric
appears to have lost much of its old resonance. Mr Mugabe himself
admitted for the first time the other day that the country faced
an economic crisis. "Even the elderly people [traditionally
his staunchest supporters] have lost hope and want him to go,"
said a head-teacher in Masvingo province. "I am fed up. Either
Simba or Morgan would be better." And yet as Mr Tsvangirai,
head of the larger of the MDC's two factions, knows all too
well, it is not easy to defeat the incumbent who has all the powers
of the state at his disposal to ensure victory. Since the MDC's
formation eight years ago, the party has lost three elections widely
condemned by independent observers as deeply flawed. While there
have been far fewer reports of state-sponsored violence against
opposition supporters than in the last three campaigns, the election
remains skewed in the president's favour.
The national
police chief made his feelings clear on Friday when he denounced
Mr Mugabe's rivals as western "puppets". State television
and radio, by far the most influential media, are little more than
mouthpieces for Mr Mugabe. NGOs monitoring the elections suspect
that as many as 20 per cent of the names on the voters' roll
are of dead and absentee people who will "vote" for Zanu
PF. Diplomats highlight a shortfall of voting stations in areas
where Mr Mugabe is least popular. Recent constitutional changes
negotiated in mediation talks hosted by South Africa are dismissed
by many analysts as perfunctory. The changes were "much too
late", said Brian Penduka, from the Zimbabwe
Human Rights Forum. The opposition candidates are pinning their
hopes on a run-off. In theory that happens if the winner does not
get more than 50 per cent of the vote.
Lovemore Madhuku,
chairman of the National
Constitutional Assembly of Zimbabwe, and a veteran critic of
the president, believes such hopes are deluded. "Mugabe is
not facing a serious threat. The electoral situation is so defective
and the ruling regime has a grip on the process in such a way that,
despite the uncertainty felt by most of the electorate, he will
still win." His opponents say that at the least there will
be a run-off. They are wrong. The regime is confident the methods
they have put in place will ensure the result they need." In
the Masvingo hall, after Mr Makoni answered the first three questions,
an aide urgently drew proceedings to a close. They had already exceeded
the 30-minutes allowed for their meeting. The police could come
at any time. They dispersed into the night, hoping but not exactly
expectant that an upset was genuinely in sight.
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