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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
Mugabe's
last stand
Scott
Johnson, Newsweek
March 22, 2008
http://www.newsweek.com/id/128544?from=rss
A former close ally may
offer the best chance yet of toppling Zimbabwe's dictator at the
ballot box.
'A Gorbachev
Type': Makoni's candidacy is evidence that the system is fracturing
from within.
Politics is dangerous
business in Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe. So this crowd of 4,000 tired-looking
peasants and factory workers, packed into a soccer stadium in the
town of Gweru, is understandably subdued. They chat quietly among
themselves, listening to a popular Zimbabwean song, "We Are
Afraid of the Father," about a patriarch's violent rages. The
tune suits the event-a rally for Simba Makoni, the 57-year-old technocrat
who is challenging Mugabe, one of Africa's last "big men,"
in elections this week. The crowd roars when Makoni jogs onto a
giant stage and doffs his blue cap. "I am taking off my hat
so you can see that I am a man," he says, shouting. "My
name is Simba Makoni! And I am the one!"
If ever Zimbabwe needed
a savior it's now. An inflation rate that tops 100,000 percent has
destroyed the economy. One in five adults in Zimbabwe is infected
with HIV; women have the lowest life expectancy-34 years-in the
world. And at 84, Mugabe refuses to ease the grip in which he's
held the country since independence in 1980. Like dictators everywhere,
he's long been sustained by cronies who don't much care what happens
to the nation as long as they get their cut. That's why Makoni's
political insurgency is so threatening: a former Finance minister,
he comes out of Mugabe's inner circle. The system, finally, may
be turning on itself.
Makoni is an unlikely
giant-killer. Born in rural Zimbabwe, he excelled at school and,
in the early 1970s, was one of only about 120 blacks nationwide
admitted to the University of Rhodesia. He protested against white
minority rule, narrowly escaped arrest and fled to Botswana. He
later emigrated to England where he earned a Ph.D. in chemistry
at Leicester Polytechnic. Back in Zimbabwe after 1980, and already
close to Mugabe, he became the youngest minister in the new government,
and later Finance minister. Until he was expelled last month for
challenging Mugabe, Makoni was comfortably ensconced in the ruling
party's top echelons.
Now he claims to have
the backing of key figures within the party. Earlier this month
Dumiso Dabengwa, a former military commander and hero to thousands
of veterans of the independence struggle-a constituency that has
proved unfailingly loyal to Mugabe in the past-endorsed Makoni.
There are persistent rumors that retired general Solomon Mujuru,
whose wife, Joyce, is the current vice president, may also be quietly
backing him. And one faction of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change has thrown its organization and money behind him. Makoni
says he's been trying to change the government for years. As Finance
minister in 2002 he fought to stave off hyperinflation by devaluing
the Zim dollar but was rebuffed, and later fired for his efforts.
He spoke out when government thugs beat up opposition activists
in March 2007, even visiting some who had been hospitalized in South
Africa. Abiathar Mujeyi, a close adviser, says Makoni's bid has
been "a couple of years in preparation." Makoni says he
only decided to run last December, after a ruling-party congress
rubber-stamped Mugabe's candidacy. "My colleagues were frustrated,
they were angry, they were anxious," he says. "Our leadership
... [is] preoccupied with staying in power. We don't look at the
suffering."
Not everyone is convinced.
Many believe Makoni's bid is part of a plot by Mugabe to keep power
in the hands of a small and vested minority, one that will protect
him from The Hague. (Makoni says that if he's elected Mugabe would
be subject to due process "like any ordinary citizen.")
Morgan Tsvangirai, the former labor leader who has led the opposition
for nearly a decade, still commands wide support. And Mugabe remains
a ruthless opponent. He's approved big pay raises recently for soldiers,
teachers and civil servants. And he just amended the electoral law
to allow police to enter polling stations and "assist"
illiterate voters. Mugabe is widely believed to have rigged elections
in 2002 by stuffing voter rolls and intimidating candidates.
That the elections are
up for grabs at all speaks to the cracks forming within the ruling
party, much as the collapse of the Soviet system began from within.
"Makoni is a Gorbachev type of person," says David Coltart,
an opposition parliamentarian and supporter. Makoni's advisers say
many establishment types can't go public yet out of fear. "Mugabe
can't trust his politburo anymore, or his intelligence or his military,"
says Mujeyi. "We talk to them all the time." One source
in Bulawayo, who cannot be named for fear of retribution, reported
last week that soldiers were tearing down Mugabe posters near their
barracks. Makoni may be their best chance to pull down the big man
himself.
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