|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
Simba
Makoni: the man who rattled Mugabe
Monsters and Critics
March 19, 2008
View article
on the Monsters and Critics website
Morgenster Mission, Zimbabwe
- The villagers assembled under a large tree near this Dutch Reformed
Church mission station in southern Zimbabwe showed little sign of
anxiety.
Watched by two uniformed
policemen, presidential candidate Simba Makoni was telling them
that members of President Robert Mugabe's politburo, having destroyed
Zimbabwe's once-model education system, were now sending their children
to school in Australia and the United States.
Enraged, a middle-aged
matron shouted out, 'I want to vote now!'
Even two months ago,
a scene like that would not have been possible in this rural area
that has been under the control of Mugabe's ruling Zanu-PF party
since independence 28 years ago, said Victor Zvibwiti, a former
schoolteacher from the area.
'These people would not
have dared turn up for an opposition meeting. They would have had
their heads bashed in. This has only happened since Makoni declared
his challenge to Mugabe.'
Makoni, Mugabe's
former finance minister and a member of Zanu-PF's politburo, the
party's formal inner circle, stunned his erstwhile leader and his
followers on February 5 when he declared the country's state of
economic and social chaos was a result of the 'failure of leadership'
of the 84-year-old leader, and that he would be standing against
him for the presidency in elections on March 29.
The announcement appears
to have thrown the ruling party into confusion, with thousands of
middle-ranking officials deserting to join Makoni's campaign. So
far, though, only one senior figure, Dumiso Dabengwa, the head of
military intelligence of one of the two guerrilla movements fighting
the country's white minority government in the 1972-1979 guerilla
war, has openly joined Makoni.
Mugabe's propaganda machine
describes the two men's desertions as 'a non-event,' while at the
same time filling the official press, radio and television with
condemnations of their 'betrayal.' Mugabe declared that Makoni was
'like a prostitute.'
It was obviously a case
of 'methinks she does protest too much,' remarked a Western diplomat.
But with 10 days to go
before the presidential election held simultaneously with parliamentary
and local council elections Makoni appears to have a long way to
go.
An opinion poll
by the respected local Mass
Public Opinion Institute (MPOI) published last week, gave former
national labour head Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the major faction
of the divided Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), 28 per cent
of the vote, Mugabe 20 per cent and Makoni only 9 per cent.
The poll was skewed by
a heavy 24 per cent of people refusing to divulge their choice,
and MPOI head Eldred Masungure said the poll showed that there was
no clear winner.
'Makoni has a lot of
latent support,' he said. 'The trick is converting it into manifest
support. Those in the shadows, particular the senior figures who
are being talked about, need to gather their courage before election
day and declare themselves.'
Voters are attracted
to among others, the absence of any corruption or violence in Makoni's
background, compared with other senior officials, analysts said.
He is also the only long-term close associate of Mugabe who was
not involved in the guerrilla war, analysts point out. However,
his failure to have spoken out against Mugabe during the last eight
years of severe repression have dented his credibility.
Simbarashe Herbert Stanley
Makoni was born in the eastern districts of what was then Rhodesia
on March 22, 1950, and went to mission schools for his secondary
education where he first became politically active. He was a science
undergraduate at the University of Rhodesia in 1973 when he was
expelled for taking part in a rowdy anti-government demonstration,
and left for Britain.
There he enrolled at
the University of Leeds and graduated in chemistry and zoology,
while in his spare time he became a leading exiled activist for
Mugabe's party. In 1978 he received his doctorate in pharmaceutical
chemistry at Leicester Polytechnic College.
He returned to Zimbabwe
at independence in 1980, and became Mugabe's youngest minister,
aged 30. After about four years following a disastrous handling
of a national fuel crisis he left the government to become the executive
secretary of the Southern African Development Coordination Conference,
a regional body trying to break away from economic dependence on
then apartheid-ruled South Africa.
After 10 years, he returned
home to be appointed chief executive of the state-owned newspaper
company, but left to join the private sector after he rebuked one
of his editors for racist attacks on whites, and Mugabe backed the
editor.
After a few years in
the private sector, he returned to government as an MP in 2000,
and was appointed finance minister. He resigned after Mugabe refused
his advice to devalue the currency. Mugabe then denounced him as
an 'economic saboteur.'
*Makoni
and his wife, Chipo, had four sons, one of whom was killed in a
motor accident in South Africa while a student there.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|