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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
elections: Will the world stop Mugabe?
Scott Baldauf, Christian Science Monitor
April 07, 2008
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0407/p01s02-woaf.html
With President Robert
Mugabe taking the unusual step of claiming electoral "errors
and miscalculations" by his own handpicked Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission, the stage now is set for the 84-year-old leader to challenge
his party's loss of its parliamentary majority and to claim an outright
presidential victory in the March 29 elections.
Strong-armed tactics
by Mr. Mugabe's police, threats of violence by his loyal armed militias,
and an unwillingness to concede defeat in what African observers
claim was a "free and fair" election are now putting the
international community into a difficult spot. If Mugabe refuses
to give up power, what will or can the outside world do?
"I think besides
the [United Nations], the region - including members of the Southern
African Development Community - is going to take an increasing role
in Zimbabwe," says Chris Maroleng, a Zimbabwe expert at the
Institute for Security Studies in Tshwane, as Pretoria, South Africa
is now called. "[Mugabe] has lost the plot. He has always given
the seeming appearance of legality in the past, but with claiming
that his own ZEC has rigged the elections against him, he's overstepped
himself."
For years, African leaders
have told the world they can solve their own problems through regional
bodies such as the African Union (AU) and the Southern African Development
Community (SADC). But critics say that African leaders have been
quite reluctant to confront one of their own, especially a liberation-era
leader such as Mugabe, and that regional mediation efforts such
as those instigated by South African President Thabo Mbeki have
generally encouraged a continuation of the status quo rather than
a pursuit of justice or democratic principles.
If Mugabe overturns the
results of the elections to remain in power, the key test of African
regional problem solving will be to see what his neighbors - all
avowed proponents of democracy - will do.
A wait-and-see
approach
In
London, Mr. Mbeki - the man selected by the SADC last year to mediate
a settlement between Mugabe and the opposition ahead of the election
- urged patience this weekend. "It's time to wait," Mbeki
told reporters in London. "Let's see the outcome of the election
results."
For its part, Zimbabwe's
main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
has continued to assert its legitimacy as the rightful victors.
Over the weekend,
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai released tabulated results, posted
by the ZEC outside each polling station, claiming victory with 50.3
percent over Mugabe's 42.9 percent. An independent group, Zimbabwean
Election Support Network, put the figures at 49.4 percent and
41.8 percent respectively, indicating that it would be necessary
to hold a runoff vote within three weeks.
The state-owned Sunday
Mail newspaper reported that Mugabe's party was challenging election
results from 16 parliamentary seats, including four constituencies
in the Mberengwa area, implying that the ZEC had skewed election
results in favor of the opposition.
"As will soon become
apparent, the constituency elections officer and his team committed
errors of miscounting that are so glaring as to prejudice not just
our clients' candidate," but also ruling ZANU-PF party candidates
running for Parliament, the ZANU-PF said in a letter of complaint
to the ZEC, quoted by the Sunday Mail.
ZANU-PF secretary for
administration Didymus Mutasa confirmed that his party would be
challenging 16 House of Assembly seats won by the MDC, adding that
his party was confident that reclaiming the 16 seats won by the
MDC would allow ZANU-PF to regain majority in the House of Assembly.
In some parts of the
country, veterans of Zimbabwe's 1970s liberation war against the
former white-ruled government of Rhodesia - staunch backers of Mugabe
- have set up bases waiting for a green light to strike at white
farmers and supporters of the MDC.
Time
for the UN to step in?
Ozias
Tungawara, a Zimbabwe expert at the Open Society Institute in Johannesburg,
says that "there is no hope in expecting that the SADC is going
to act in a democratic way. The SADC is a club of executives, they
are going to close ranks to support each other and to support Mugabe
in holding onto power."
But while the SADC and
the AU seem to refuse "to hold ZANU-PF to account," in
terms of upholding AU standards on the conduct of elections, Mr.
Tungawara says that it's time for the UN to step in. "It's
high time that the UN take a decisive role and pronounce to the
ZANU-PF government that they must adhere to the principles of the
UN in terms of democracy and governance. We expect much more stringent
action by the UN in intervening more directly in Zimbabwe."
In Harare, Mr. Tsvangirai
claimed that strong-arm tactics such as the raiding of MDC offices
on Thursday night, the arrest of foreign journalists, and the growing
presence of armed riot police on the streets all signal that Mugabe
is "preparing a war against the people."
"Mugabe must accept
that the country needs to move forward," said Tsvangirai. "He
cannot hold the country to ransom. He is the problem not the solution."
Roy Bennett, the MDC's
treasurer, told the Monitor that his party would continue to pursue
its goals through peaceful means, specifically through the courts.
"We have won the
elections, so what we want is to have that fact recognized by the
ZEC," says Mr. Bennett. "Mugabe is trying to argue that
the MDC bribed the electoral officials, which is nonsense. I believe
the ZEC has the results that show we have won with 50 percent, and
... they are trying to argue that ZANU-PF not only won the Parliament
but the presidency as well."
Bennett is calling on
regional bodies such as SADC to insist that the full legal electoral
process be followed by the letter. He also rules out street protests
in case ZANU-PF overturns the ZEC results and declares itself victors.
"We're not going to call people on the streets. We're not putting
people's lives at risk. We will call on the world to pressure Mugabe.
We can only do this through righteous acts and never deviate from
that."
South African civil liberties
group CIVICUS criticized the SADC for calling the Saturday elections
"free and fair," while failing to note the beatings and
arrests of Zimbabwean activists that preceded the elections.
Speaking of
the Thursday arrest of foreign journalists in Harare, CIVICUS secretary
general Kumi Naidoo said, "These arrests are a disturbing indication
that the Zimbabwean government is trying to silence any critical
voices. We urge [Mbeki], on behalf of Southern Africa, to show leadership
in calling for the protection of these rights, said Ms. Naidoo.
Sikhumbuzo Ndiweni, a
former ZANU-PF member and now a political observer in Johannesburg,
says that MDC is being "naive" for assuming that Mugabe
will simply hand over power.
"[The MDC] doesn't
seem to have a Plan B," says Mr. Ndiweni. "SADC is playing
quiet and its tactics are simply encouraging Mugabe to devise his
own Plan B. [The MDC] should not count on somebody outside to rescue
them."
*A journalist
who could not be named for security reasons contributed from Harare.
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