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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe's
election season: A time of hope and skullduggery
The
New York Times
March 26, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/26/world/africa/26zimbabwe.html?ref=world
Harare - When 100 young
men stormed onto his property last week, Knox Solomon Danda, an
opposition candidate for Parliament in rural Zvimba, hid under a
table with his wife and children, he said, pulling the tablecloth
low to the floor to better conceal their cowering shapes. His 5-year-old
daughter began to whimper. He held her close to muffle the sound.
"I don't know whether
these men meant to kill us or simply scare us," he said. The
intruders pelted the house with bricks, and while Mr. Danda and
his family escaped unhurt, he said two of his supporters suffered
a terrible pummeling in an adjacent field of maize, one of them
enduring a gash to his ribs from the chop of an ax.
Election time has again
come to Zimbabwe - expectant days of hope and suspense, but also
of fear, with the queuing up at the polls customarily preceded by
a campaign of state-supported intimidation and skullduggery.
Voters go to the polls
this Saturday, with President Robert Mugabe, the iconic leader of
a nation enduring catastrophic hardship, trying to retain the power
he has held for 28 years. Here in Harare, there is the usual speculation
about the political winds. In what provinces is the president's
party strong? Where is it weak? But the more frequent conjecture
involves the mechanics of an outcome that is presumed to be rigged.
"Even if Mugabe
only gets one vote, the tabulated results are in the box and he
has won," said Andrew Moyse, who coordinates a project that
monitors coverage in the Zimbabwe news media.
Echoing the sentiment,
Noel Kututwa, the chairman of a coalition of civic groups dedicated
to honest elections, said, "We will not have a free and fair
election. There is desperation for change. But in the end I can't
say that Mugabe won't win, because he probably will."
The 84-year-old president
- a hero of the nation's liberation struggle and one of the last
of Africa's ruthlessly autocratic "big men" - is often
imputed here with mythic cunning. Certainly, great advantages have
accrued to his incumbency. The state controls radio, TV and the
only daily newspaper, with the reporting of events reliably biased
toward Mr. Mugabe, extolling his courage and generosity while depicting
his opponents as little more than footmen for the British, who were
once Zimbabwe's colonial masters.
In a country suffering
rampant hunger, the government bolsters its standing by giving out
subsidized food, routinely favoring, critics allege, members of
Mr. Mugabe's party, the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front. In a country enduring epic inflation of more than 100,000
percent, the campaigning president has been able to bestow tractors
and plows to village chiefs whose gratitude is expected to be a
reciprocal harvest of votes.
Then there are the brass
tacks of the election itself. Groups like Mr. Kututwa's complain
about an election commission dominated by Mr. Mugabe's cronies;
rules that bar people from registering in cities where the president
is less popular; a paucity of polling stations in those same locations;
and long outdated voting rolls that in the past have allegedly permitted
guileful ZANU-PF activists to cast the ballots of the dead.
"There are many
tricks to play; the illiterate stand in separate queues and we mark
the votes for them," said Gift Mukumira, a former ZANU-PF youth
organizer who has grown unhappy with Mr. Mugabe. He lives in Epworth,
on Harare's outskirts. "Last time, our people were bussed from
Mutoko and allowed to vote a second time in Epworth."
But for all of Mr. Mugabe's
wily tactics, he is burdened by an economy that went into freefall
in 2000 when white farm owners were ousted from their property,
a seizure of agricultural land that has so far reaped only disaster.
About a quarter of Zimbabwe's 13 million people have fled the country;
about 80-90 percent of those left behind are unemployed. The president
now acknowledges his people's hardship but defends his policies
as a matter of post-colonial justice, insisting that "national
sovereignty" is at stake.
His two leading opponents
argue that the confiscated farms have not been used to benefit the
poor but rather to reward Mr. Mugabe's chums.
One of those candidates
is Morgan Tsvangirai, a one-time trade union leader who received
42 percent of the official vote in 2002 and claims the election
was stolen from him. Last March, Mr. Tsvangirai was so badly beaten
by police at a prayer rally that his bruised head resembled a melon
that had been rolled down a hillside. This time, he has campaigned
largely without interference, speaking to huge crowds.
"We expect the enemies
of justice to engage in every trick in the book," Mr. Tsvangirai
said during one speech this week. Members of his party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, allege that 9 million ballots have been printed,
even though there are only 5.9 million voters; they suggest the
surplus may well end up marked for Mr. Mugabe.
The other main challenger
is Simba Makoni, a former finance minister and longtime ZANU-PF
stalwart who is leading a rebellion within the party itself. He
has the vocal support of a few other well-known party dissidents
and perhaps the furtive backing of many more. It has become a common
parlor game in Harare to speculate which of Mr. Mugabe's professed
loyalists now secretly support Mr. Makoni - and whether that clandestine
support might somehow pry apart the party's vote-rigging apparatus.
By law, the
votes are supposed to be counted at each polling place, with the
totals publicly posted. If that is widely done, groups like Mr.
Kututwa's Zimbabwe
Election Support Network can use sampling techniques to assess
the accuracy of the nationally-announced results. "But this
posting of the vote has never happened," Mr. Kututwa said.
International election
observers are being restricted to a select group of invitees from
non-Western nations like China, Iran, Libya, Russia and Venezuela.
Also present is a delegation from the Southern Africa Development
Community, a bloc of Zimbabwe's neighbors. In recent elections,
as Mr. Mugabe's opponents cried foul, S.A.D.C. observers pronounced
the voting process to be fair.
This past year, a S.A.D.C.
delegation led by President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa attempted
to get the political rivals in Zimbabwe to agree on new election
procedures. Though several accommodations were reached, Mr. Mugabe
has since reneged on most of them, the latest being the overturning
of a ban on policemen inside polling stations.
Whatever the vote count,
the outcome is likely to be vigorously disputed.
Indeed, the
commander of the nation's military, Constantine Chiwenga, has been
quoted as saying
the army will not abide by a result that favors "sell-outs
and agents of the West." He and others cast the election as
a continuation of the liberation struggle.
Last week, the International
Crisis Group, a nonprofit organization that seeks to prevent deadly
conflicts, issued a report that called the situation "volatile,
with a high risk of violence." It asked the African Union to
prepare to broker a power-sharing deal that might save Zimbabwe
from the mortal consequences of a wildly disputed election.
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