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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
waits to exhale
Alex Perry,
Time Magazine
February 22, 2008
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1727552,00.html
In the Harare township
of Warren Park, for the first time that anyone can remember, political
graffiti has begun to appear on clapperboard walls and the backs
of tin sheds. Alongside election posters for Robert Mugabe, unseen
hands scrawl messages to the President. "Chinja Maitiro"
reads one: "Change Your Way." Another declares: "Zvakwana,"
meaning "Enough." Nearby, a picture of the 84-year-old
Zimbabwean leader has been defaced with blood-red tears and underneath
is written the word: "Cheat." These are state-run Herald
newspaper acknowledged that Mugabe had failed to win on the first
round, and predicted a run-off against Morgan Tsvangirai, leader
of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The MDC,
meanwhile, released its own tally of the vote from lists posted
outside polling stations, and claimed that Tsvangirai had scored
an outright victory with 50.3% of the vote.
If this were a normal
democracy, Mugabe would have been turned out years ago. He has presided
over a social and economic crisis that has seen unemployment reach
80% and inflation at more than 100,000%, while average life expectancy
has plunged to 34 for men and 37 for women. Mugabe had tried to
deflect attention from his own failings by championing the confiscation
and redistribution of white-owned farms - the legacy of a colonial
past that had left the lion's share of arable land in the hands
of Zimbabwe's white minority - but this only deepened the crisis:
The pick of the confiscated farms went to the President's cronies,
and the country that had once been the bread-basket of southern
Africa was suddenly no longer able to feed itself.
That is a lot more than
most electorates would stand for, but Zimbabweans had little redress.
After the 1980 election that ended the white minority regime of
Rhodesia and brought him to power, Mugabe created a kind of one-party
democracy, in which elections and nominally independent state institutions
were dominated by his Zanu-PF party, which beat opponents and rigged
ballots, and where the organs of state, particularly the army and
police, were loyal to the party rather than the people. Left with
no means of redress as their homeland rotted, millions of Zimbabweans
simply left the country.
As the weaker candidate
with none of the MDC's momentum and little chance of picking up
support from other losing candidates, Mugabe would be extremely
unlikely to win a free and fair run-off vote. In the past, that
fact alone would have been a cue for repression and rigging. But
this year's relatively violence-free campaign suggests many soldiers
and policemen are no longer so willing to do their president's dirty
work. The MDC still claims the regime fixed many parliamentary seats.
But reports in the government's primary organ, the Herald, indicate
that the regime has accepted that Mugabe failed to win.
Dictators are rarely
eased out gracefully, and Mugabe's departure now seems a matter
of time. "It's the beginning of the end for Mugabe," said
Aubrey Matshiqi of the Johannesburg-based Centre for Policy Studies.
At a Harare press conference on Tuesday, Tsvangirai declared: "After
Saturday, March 29, Zimbabwe will never be the same again. The votes
cast on Saturday were for change and a new beginning." Mugabe's
exit, whenever it comes, would cue the re-birth of a nation.
Zimbabwe's regeneration,
says Michelle
Gavin, Adjunct Scholar on Africa at the Council on Foreign Relations,
"would have to be an all-hands-on-deck effort." International
financial institutions and donors, which ended their involvement
to protest the regime's corruption and human rights abuses, would
likely to step in with emergency programs to bring Zimbabwe back
from the brink. And already international investors sense a bargain
in the making. LonZim, an investment fund set up by the Lonrho mining
group last December, has already raised $65 million to invest in
Zimbabwe. "We're very bullish that Zimbabwe as a country will
become very strong again," said LonZim director Geoffrey White.
"Any economy that is in the position that Zimbabwe is in will
recover. That's the opportunity." Zimbabwe retains a solid
base of infrastructure, and considerable mineral deposits.
For Mugabe himself, the
future may be less rosy. Leaving office might well earn him a day
in court to answer for some of his actions, particularly the Matabeleland
massacres in which tens of thousands of people were killed after
Mugabe ordered his army's North Korean-trained Brigade 5 into the
heartland of Mugabe's longtime political rival, Joshua Nkomo. But
Mugabe may be smarter than other strongmen, such as Liberia's Charles
Taylor, who were eased into exile with a promise of immunity, only
to find themselves on trial at The Hague. A spokesman for the International
Criminal Court, in a statement released to TIME, hinted that the
Zimbabwean President ensured long ago that he would outwit international
justice. "Zimbabwe is not party to the Rome statute [which
created the court]," said the spokesman. "The court does
not have jurisdiction over crimes allegedly committed in Zimbabwe
or by Zimbabwe nationals." So, even when the writing is on
the wall in Harare, Robert Gabriel Mugabe may still have a few last
tricks up his sleeve.
- With reporting
by Ian Evans/Harare and William Lee Adams/London Time.com
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