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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Winds
of change gather pace as Mugabe's hungry masses dare to voice their
anger
Jan
Raath, The Times (UK)
March 15, 2008 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3556154.ece
The women sat
in the rural way; on the ground, with their legs stretched out straight
in front of them, under an enormous old tree. The men sat in a group
apart from them, all listening to Zimbabwe's newest opposition leader,
Simba Makoni. They had been ordered by the chief of the area not
to attend, but they came anyway. They did not move when two policemen
approached to watch the meeting, nor were they distracted by a campaign
meeting, 200 metres away, of the ruling Zanu PF party, even with
its large heap of food-for-votes grain bags ready for distribution
to the faithful. Mr Makoni, President Mugabe's former Finance Minister,
left the party a month ago to challenge him for the presidency in
the March 29 elections. When he made a joke of Mr Mugabe's totem,
he got loud, derisive laughs. They clapped and cheered when he scorned
the situation where a box of matches now costs Z$2 million. Their
shouts became angry ones when he told them that the members of Mr
Mugabe's politburo had sent their own children to schools in Australia
and Malaysia "after they have destroyed our education system".
One woman cried out: "I want to vote now!"
This is in the heart
of Zanu PF territory, in the rough and inhospitable province of
Masvingo in the south of the country, an area that Zanu PF proudly
claims is a "one-party province". In the last presidential
election a meeting like this would have brought the villagers a
lesson from the party youth, of bloodied heads and houses razed
to the ground. "This could never have happened here, not even
two months ago," said a retired civil servant, who gave his
name as Albert. "Anything can happen in this election now.
We cannot continue suffering." The next two meetings I followed
on Mr Makoni's whistle-stop tour of the area proceeded without interruption.
People cheered him, raised their clasped hands in his salute and,
in full public view, put on free T-shirts bearing his sunny visage.
"We don't want Mugabe any more," said a thin, young mother
called Esnat. "We are hungry. We have nothing. We want change."
Wherever I went, people spoke the forbidden word, "change".
In the blink of an eye, something has happened to Zimbabwe's rural
people, after nearly 30 years under Mr Mugabe's absolute rule, where
the ruling party card is the key to receiving famine relief when
you are starving, while dissent has meant death for hundreds. The
rural areas have, by a policy of brutal subjection and deliberate
impoverishment, been made a reliable reservoir of votes for Zanu
PF that Mr Mugabe, 84, has used to stay in power since he was first
challenged in 2000.
But suddenly the web
of fear and silence appears to be dissolving. Last week in the Gutu
area, another Mugabe fortress about 30 miles north of here, one
of the factions of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) was able not just to hold rallies and draw thousands of villagers,
but to see village headmen - the bailiffs of Zanu PF's rural rule
- denouncing Mr Mugabe and declaring allegiance to the MDC. "We
gave Mugabe a chance and they failed," said a headman, Tapurai
Gudo. "Now they are asking for our support. This is the time
to show that rural people are not idiots." In Mhondoro, about
40 miles south of Harare, senior officials of the party were astonished
this week to receive a rapturous welcome from thousands of villagers
in what was regarded as a virtual "no-go" area for the
opposition. A national executive member, Nelson Chamisa, said: "It
was humbling. These people are hungry, but many walked 12 miles
to hear us."
Human rights agencies
have already remarked on the relative absence of the ruling party
campaign of violence and harassment that usually begins months before
voting day. The aggressive action of the police, who, a year ago,
battered MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai for daring to enter a police
station to ask about arrested colleagues, has also subsided. At
his meeting here, Mr Makoni told his audience that police had instructions
to intimidate people into voting for Mr Mugabe. "Please, resist
these pressures," he appealed to the two officers present.
They made no move to interfere with the meeting. "There is
a wind of change," said Eldred Masunungure, who directs a respected
political opinion poll from Harare. "Similar reports are confirmed
from all round the country. Something is unfolding." Since
Mr Makoni declared his challenge on February 5, Zanu PF has shown
signs of rupturing as hundreds of middle-ranking members - but only
a handful of senior officials - abandon the party to back Mr Makoni.
Nine months of talks mediated by the South African President, Thabo
Mbeki, between Zanu PF and the two factions of the MDC, produced
only marginal concessions from Mr Mugabe, but nonetheless appear
to have imposed restraint on the ruling party. Added to that is
the staggering depth of the economic crisis and the critical food
shortages. "But it really is too early to write Mugabe's political
obituary," cautioned Mr Masunungure. "That would be wishful
thinking. There are many who think what is happening is the calm
before the storm."
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