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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Post
- Election Update: October 2008
Zimbabwe
Election Support Network
November 07, 2008
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Introduction
The report covers
the socio-political and economic developments in the month of October,
2008. Although ZESN's core business is the promotion of a
Zimbabwe where democratic electoral environment and processes are
upheld, the political, economic and social developments in the country
have a direct impact on the electoral issues and processes.
Continued attempts for a political settlement: The signing of the
deal on
15 September, 2008 was met with mixed feelings with the majority
of the people hailing it as progressive and hoping it would end
the economic doldrums the country is facing. Others expressed their
disappointment that the will of the people had been circumvented
since the June run-off election was condemned by international observers
and did not reflect the will of the people. There is a call by a
section of the society to return to the March 27 election and base
the deal on the results of that election. Others are calling for
fresh elections under the observation of international observers
arguing that the current political and electoral framework obtaining
in Zimbabwe as well as the polarisation of the country is incapable
of producing free and fair elections.
The signed deal
was a political framework put in place by the three principles to
resolve the impasse currently bedevilling the country whereby the
power sharing strategy would have seen ZANU PF being allocated 15
cabinet positions, MDC T 13 and MDC 3. Major disagreements erupted
over the distribution of the key ministries of defence, home affairs,
finance, foreign affairs, information and local government. ZANU
PF then went on to allocate itself all the fore-mentioned ministries
and gazetted them. MDC T rejected the unilateral allocation of ministries
by ZANU PF arguing that it will reduce their party to a junior partner
in the new government. It further went on to argue that MDC T carried
the mandate of the people since it won the widely accepted March
29 election. The facilitator was recalled at the request of both
parties to break the impasse of the cabinet ministerial allocation.
In the facilitator's view the list gazetted by President Mugabe
would have allowed the MDC T to play a key role in the priority
areas of restoration of economic stability since Mugabe had religuished
the Ministry of Finance to the MDC T. The list also allocated ministries
of economic planning, investment promotions, power development,
state enterprises and parastatals to the MDC T. The MDC T was concerned
that ZANU PF would control all the resource-based ministries while
the MDC T controls service provision which is currently in shambles.
The facilitator together with the principles agreed to refer the
matter to the SADC security committee generally referred to as the
troika consisting of Swaziland, Mozambique and Angola with the new
South Africa in attendance as the current SADC Chair.
The SADC troika
failed to take place in Swaziland as Morgan Tsvangirai the MDCT
president and one of the principles was not issued with proper documentation
by the Registrar General. Tsvangirai was issued with an emergency
travel document a day before his departure to Swaziland. He was
unable to obtain South African visa in time for the travel. While
ZANU PF sympathizers argued that sanctions were to blame to the
lack of resources to process the passport application, others noted
that it was part of ZANU PF machinations to scuttle the talks ahead
of the party's congress in December, 2008. It was recommended
that an extraordinary SADC Summit be held in South Africa in order
to solve the impasse.
Despite the signing of the agreement and the initiation of the talks
a violent clamp-down of human rights defenders continues to take
place. On October 27, 2008 150 activists from the Women's
Coalition of Zimbabwe (WCoZ) and the Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU) who were holding a peaceful
demonstration in Harare were tear-gased by the police and 42 women
from the coalition were arrested for calling for a resolution to
the political impasse between ZANU-PF. Reports from the provinces
indicate that some high-ranking members of government are going
to villages criticizing the political settlement and noting that
there will never be unity between the two parties, others are noting
that the unity proposed is for the top-ranking officials only and
not for local levels while a few progressive ZANU PF senior officials
are calling for reconciliation and peace and a respect of the current
negotiations taking place. The ZPP
report indicate that although physical violence is on the decline
in most provinces, verbal and psychological abuse is still on the
rise with cases of discrimination, harassment and intimidation reported.
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