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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Post
presidential run-off election report: Fourth edition
Zimbabwe
Peace Project
July 31, 2008
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Overview
The Background
This Report comes against the background of one of the most highly
politically charged election periods in Zimbabwe's post independence
electoral history, an era typical of a nation at war with itself.
As chronicled in the June Post Election Violence Report, rural areas
were virtually sealed off from opposition rallies while freedom
of movement was severely curtailed with villagers being asked to
carry passes and other authorizing letters if they intend to visit
another village. Hate speech, incitement of violence, and threats
of war characterized electoral campaign rhetoric.
Calls by Thabo Mbeki
[the South African President and commissioned SADC mediator between
ZANU PF and MDC], Jacob Zuma [the South African ruling ANC president]
and the former South African President [Nelson Mandela] to postpone
the election, exhorting the two political actors to engage in power-sharing
talks did not see the light of day as the ruling party presidential
candidate argued that they were only amenable to negotiations after
the election and ridiculing those criticizing the decision to go
ahead with the poll as "making idiotic noises that would not
bother us". So were the calls by the then SADC chairperson
and president of Zambia, the late Levy Mwanawasa; the SADC Organ
on Politics, Defense and Security, and Jean Ping, the Chairperson
of the African Union Commission.
The condemnations that
accompanied the run up also dogged the election outcome with world
leaders dismissing the presidential run-off as a "sham"
or "farce", the African National Congress Youth League
Chairperson Julius Kalema calling it "a joke of the worst
order", UK based Zimbabwean lawyer and political analyst Alex
Magaisa describing the election outcome as "pyrrhic victory
for ZANU PF" while South African based Zimbabwean businessman
Mutumwa Mawere referred to it as an election that had "no
sheen of legitimacy" with another local commentator caricaturing
the election as "stone-age politics on display".
Reports by the Pan African
Parliament Observer Team, the African Union Observer Mission, the
Botswana Observer Team, and the SADC Election Observer Mission [SEOM]
Preliminary Report also roundly condemned the election process and
outcome as generally "not giving rise to the conduct of free,
fair and credible elections", "falling short of accepted
AU standards", "not representing the will of the people
of Zimbabwe", and "not conforming to SADC Principles
and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections', among others.
The Group of Eminent African leaders that include Nelson Mandela
also expressed visible disquiet on the conduct of elections, generally
describing the election as illegitimate and in fact a dark patch
in Africa's electoral history.
Observed
scenarios
While elections have come and gone amid reports of a resumption
in inter-party talks between ZANU PF and the two formations of the
MDC, scenarios from July ZPP monitoring reports tell a different
story. Election violence is reportedly in stubborn retreat!
The political climate
remains tense, fear of retribution still haunting the nation. Society
is yet to come to terms with the ugly scars of the pre-election
era. Opposition politics is still viewed as a political crime. Tolerance
of different political views or even the sight of someone donning
opposition regalia remains on the low side in both urban and rural
areas, while opposition activities remain on blackout on the national
electronic and press media. Just a week after the election, an incident
of arson was recorded in Chitungwiza on 6 July when a factory belonging
to Kambuzuma MDC MP Elect was reportedly petrol bombed.
While unity
and peace talks are going on at the political leadership level,
in some provinces, it is business as usual. The message of peace
is yet to cascade to grassroots structures. In most rural constituencies,
new violence campaigns have emerged under operations Show Red Finger,
No Vote No Food, Why Did You Vote and Akavhotera MDC Muno Ndiyani
[Account for the MDC Vote]. Under Operation Show Red Finger, not
having the indelible red ink on one's finger was akin to endorsing
the MDC NO VOTE campaign. At Hopley farm in Harare, by 28 June,
a witch-hunt for those who voted for the MDC had started with reports
of eviction threats to those suspected to have voted for the MDC
or spoiled ballots.
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