| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Vote
Mugabe or starve - the latest ploy from a regime clinging
on to power
Claire Soares,
Independent (UK)
June 07, 2008
View article
on the Independent (UK) website
The spectre
of massive enforced starvation is looming over Zimbabwe as President
Robert Mugabe's regime unleashes a sinister new tactic to help him
cling to power in the presidential run-off vote in less than three
weeks' time. The US ambassador in Harare accused government officials
yesterday of blackmailing opposition supporters, by denying them
food unless they surrendered their national identity card and thus
gave up their right to vote. Mr Mugabe is no stranger to using food
as a political weapon in a country where many people are locked
into a desperate struggle to put the next meal on the table. By
suspending all
aid groups operating in the country on Thursday he has once
again concentrated crucial supplies into the hands of his cronies.
But whereas in previous clampdowns, food was only given to those
whose names appeared on lists drawn up by the ruling Zanu PF party,
now it seems the regime is trying to entice supporters from the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to the distributions,
so it can then eliminate them from the electoral roll.
"If you
have an MDC card, you can receive food but first you have to give
the national identity card to the government officials, which means
they will hold on to it until after the election," the US ambassador,
James McGee, told reporters on a conference call from the Zimbabwean
capital. "The only way you can access food is to give up your
right to vote. It is absolutely illegal." The frightening new
ploy has sparked outrage around the world. "This is the first
time we have heard about MDC people having their identity cards
taken away," Tiseke Kasambala, the Zimbabwe specialist at Human
Rights Watch, said on a visit to London. "It's a new tactic
to disenfranchise them, another brutal attempt to flush out more
opposition supporters, and take them out of the voting system."
The opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, beat Mr Mugabe in the
first round of elections on 29 March, but failed to win the majority
needed to avoid a second ballot. Having already lost control of
the parliament, Mr Mugabe - and more importantly the generals
who are believed to be running the country like a junta -
is frantic to ensure that his 28-year reign continues after Zimbabweans
return to the polls on 27 June.
Charles Abani, Oxfam's
director in southern Africa, said he was "deeply concerned"
at the suspension of aid groups. "A lot of people are completely
reliant on food aid to keep them alive. They have nothing else to
eat." About four million people are dependent on food aid in
the country which used to be the region's breadbasket. Many people
blame Mr Mugabe's agricultural policies for the food shortages and
his woeful stewardship for the official inflation rate of 165,000
per cent. Although UN agencies are not directly affected by the
ban, they could still see their work stagger to a halt because they
rely on other aid groups to distribute their food rations. The UN's
World Food Programme was planning to feed some 300,000 people this
month alone. Jasmine Whitbread, head of Save the Children, estimated
"that in areas we are working, many families' food supplies
will start to run out next month". That tallied with the US
ambassador's prediction that there would be enough stocks until
the election but "massive, massive starvation" could then
ensue.
Mr McGee described
the Mugabe government as, "a desperate regime ... which will
do anything to stay in power". This week it has become increasingly
clear that Mr Mugabe is trying to snuff out any kind of opposition
election campaign. Mr Tsvangirai was detained
at a roadblock yesterday for the second time in three days. He was
held up 25 miles outside Zimbabwe's second-largest city, Bulawayo,
an MDC stronghold. After being taken to a police station, he was
told that all opposition rallies in the country had been banned
indefinitely. "The regime is increasing the decibels of insanity,"
said Tendai Biti, an opposition party chief. The MDC says 65 people
have been killed in violence since the March ballot but independent
attempts to confirm those figures have also been thwarted.
US and British diplomats
trying to investigate the allegations were detained on Thursday,
after being ordered from the cars at gunpoint by roadside police
- an episode described as "outrageous" by government
officials Washington and London. "This shows they're really
upping the stakes," said Ms Kasambala of Human Rights Watch.
"With the NGO suspension and the diplomatic stand-offs and
the violence, there's no way there can be a credible election".
Foreign observers are expected to number a paltry 700, and the Zimbabwean
army has already been on the move to seal off areas, particularly
in the Mashonaland provinces, raising the prospect of increased
intimidation and mass ballot-rigging away from the eyes of outside
monitors. Despite the lack of credibility surrounding the forthcoming
ballot, neither Britain nor the US have called for this month's
poll to be cancelled. "Anything less than a run-off would just
be giving the Mugabe regime a victory they do not deserve,"
the US ambassador said.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|