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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
In
Zimbabwe, hope has turned to silent terror
Peter Oborne, The Spectator (UK)
April 09, 2008
http://www.spectator.co.uk/i//the-magazine/features/600916/in-zimbabwe-hope-has-turned-to-silent-terror.thtml
On the night after the
presidential elections 12 days ago, a British diplomat, Philip Barclay,
witnessed the count at the little outpost of Bikisa deep in rural
Masvingo. This part of Zimbabwe is Zanu PF heartland. In all five
presidential elections since independence in 1981 the people of
Bikisa had voted solidly for Robert Mugabe — and there was
little expectation of anything different this time.
Barclay reports feeling
faint with sheer amazement when it became clear that the largest
pile of votes was for Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change. Just 44 people in Bikisa voted for
President Mugabe, against an overwhelming 167 for Tsvangirai.
Reports from other areas
soon made it clear that Bikisa was not exceptional, and that Mugabe
had been voted out of power in a political earthquake. By late in
the afternoon on 30 March — the day after the election —
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, an independent body charged with
overseeing the poll, was in a position to make a cautious estimate
of the result. It judged that Morgan Tsvangirai had secured almost
60 per cent of the vote, more than double that of Robert Mugabe
with 27 per cent.
Sources say that when
this news was brought to the President his first reaction was genuine
incredulity. He is now so out of touch, and so used to winning elections,
that he had felt confident of a comfortable majority.
Incredulity swiftly turned
to anger, and Mugabe grimly ordered the Electoral Commission to
declare him the victor. This command was resisted by very brave
election officials. They received unexpected support, however, from
senior personnel within the Zimbabwe state security apparatus, fearful
of the public order consequences that would certainly flow from
such blatant fixing of the result.
At this stage South Africa's
President Mbeki tried to solve the problem. Reportedly Mbeki also
wished the result to be rigged, though not as blatantly as Mugabe.
He seems to have proposed that the ZEC should sharply downgrade
Tsvangirai's share of the vote, sharply upgrade Mugabe to
a more respectable 40 per cent and dramatically increase the share
of the vote enjoyed by the renegade Zanu PF presidential candidate
Simba Makoni.
Simba Makoni is Mbeki's
personal choice as the next president of Zimbabwe. There is some
evidence that he is also supported by the US state department. A
highly intelligent and well-educated man, Makoni was a member of
the Mugabe inner circle for many years, while maintaining warm links
to foreign observers and exercising care to evade personal responsibility
for the worst of the regime's atrocities. He only stood for
the presidency after being given the green light by Mbeki earlier
this year. Unlike Morgan Tsvangirai, a former miner of incredible
courage but with little formal education, Makoni is the kind of
politician who appeals profoundly to the bureaucratic mind.
Mbeki, quietly backed
by the United States, hoped to induce Mugabe to step down and get
Makoni to stand in his stead. This plan had definite logic. Makoni,
though he will never be forgiven by Mugabe for what the President
sees as an act of unspeak- able betrayal, retains the strongest
links with Zanu PF. This means that he would probably be acceptable
to the senior generals and policemen who hold the key to Zimbabwe's
immediate future, and to whom Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change is utterly repugnant.
By the start of this
week it was beginning to be clear that the Makoni wheeze was not
going to fly. The trouble is that — like many politicians
beloved of the official class — Mbeki's protégé
lacks mass support. The failure of the South African intervention
means there was stalemate in Zimbabwe as The Spectator went to press.
Basically, President Mugabe has only three options, and time is
running out very fast indeed.
The first of these is
to mount a coup d'état, the solution which is preferred
by Mugabe's inner circle. Significantly, it seems to be favoured
by General Constantine Chiwenga, commander in chief of the armed
forces, and by Air Force Marshall Perence Shiri, Mugabe's
blood relation and close ally.
It must be borne in mind
that senior figures such as these do not merely stand to lose power
if Mugabe wins. They also face the prospect of being brought to
justice for the crimes of the Mugabe regime. It was Perence Shiri,
for instance, who led the North Korean-trained Fifth Brigades in
the Matabeleland genocide of the early 1980s.
The problem with the
idea of a coup d'état is not really the international
condemnation that would inevitably result. The Southern African
Development Community (SADC) might not like it, but under the prostrate
guidance of Thabo Mbeki it would never lift a finger.
The true problem is different:
there are real reasons to doubt whether commanders like Shiri (whose
Chinese Mig fighters were buzzing low over Bulawayo in an act of
naked intimidation when I was there two weeks ago) have the support
of their troops. There is overwhelming anecdotal evidence that ordinary
soldiers and policemen, even some members of the feared Central
Intelligence Organisation, have turned against Mugabe. The director
of intelligence, Happyton Bonyongwe, is said to be quietly supporting
Tsvangirai.
Mugabe's second
option is to declare the recent elections null and order a re-run.
There is strong evidence that the President is preparing the way
for this. He is already taking revenge, for example, on the hapless
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, several of whose members have been
arrested over the last few days. In a marvellous irony, they are
being accused of rigging the result against Zanu PF.
If the President calls
a second election, it will be marked by all the intimidation and
horror which was to a certain extent lacking on 29 March. Mugabe's
green bombers, his licensed torturers and murderers who bear close
comparison to Hitler's Brownshirts, are already off the leash.
Finally, Mugabe could
stand down. Here one key ingredient would be a guarantee that he
— and the scores of murderers and torturers who are linked
to him — can live the rest of their lives in the peace and
tranquillity they have denied so many others. Granting Mugabe immunity
from prosecution is hard to engineer and would be unpalatable for
some. Others may judge it well worthwhile.
Meanwhile, everyone waits
for the old man's next move. I am told by a friend who runs
one of Zimbabwe's very few remaining factories that the mood
among the workforce has changed very sharply over the last 48 hours.
Hope has turned to bemusement and then — on Tuesday morning
— to a silent, pervasive sense of terror, as if something
horrible might be just about to happen.
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