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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Aid
will flow if Mugabe goes
IRIN
News
June 25, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78946
As the sole
remaining candidate in Zimbabwe's presidential election run-off
on 27 June, Robert Mugabe should win. But then what?
"The most
likely scenario is that Mugabe will go ahead with Friday's election
and win it," said political analyst Brian Raftopolous. The
economy would continue to decline, as little in the way of aid,
investment or reforms would be forthcoming to help the country back
on its feet, he added.
John Clancy,
spokesman for Louis Michel, the European Commissioner for Development
and Humanitarian Aid, commented: "Certain minimum international
standards of democracy and human rights have to be in place [before
significant aid can be provided]. Only then can we work hand-in-hand
with the government on a [development] programme."
Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
Mugabe's only challenger, has dropped
out of the race, saying he needed to save the lives of his supporters,
who have become targets of the ruling-party militia. According to
the MDC, more than 86 of its supporters have been killed since the
general elections on 29 March, in which the MDC won a parliamentary
majority.
The international
community, through the UN Security Council, has already indicated
that it does "not regard Friday's election as legitimate",
said Pascal Richard, coordinator of Zimbabwe Watch, a lobby group
based in the Netherlands. The United States has announced that it
will not accept the outcome of the presidential run-off on 27 June.
But if post-election
negotiations led to a transitional government of national unity
involving Tsvangirai or the MDC, that could complicate the international
response.
One Western
diplomat told IRIN that lines of credit would remain closed to any
government of national unity with Mugabe in the picture. "Basically,
the re-establishment of economic relations can only happen under
a new government; under Mugabe, the government would continue with
its atrocious human rights record and destructive policies,"
he said.
"It is
evident that even under the proposed government of national unity,
Mugabe wants to come in as head of that set-up, which again would
be unacceptable because he used violence which resulted in the capitulation
of the opposition and the subsequent pulling out of the MDC candidate
from the presidential election run-off."
But Clancy offered
an alternative interpretation. "We at the EU would support
some form of negotiated transitional government, i.e. a power-sharing
scenario," he said. "We want to avoid a black-hole scenario
[in which political reforms are made] but support structures are
not there, and the situation gets worse. We would be ready to step
in and prop up [a transitional government]."
Regional
isolation
Zimbabwe
Watch's Richard pointed out that many members of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) had moved beyond the question of legitimacy
of the run-off on Friday 27 June and were concerned about the region's
security, a concern that was also raised in the UN Security Council.
It is estimated
that between three million and five million Zimbabweans have fled
repression and economic decline in their home country to seek safety
and a better life in South Africa, the regional superpower, but
recent xenophobic attacks in South Africa have forced many to turn
to neighbouring Zambia and Botswana instead. "None of these
countries can handle the influx of migrants," Richard noted.
"If he
[Mugabe] goes ahead with the election he could face regional isolation,
with the possible exception of South Africa, which still believes
it can negotiate with Mugabe," said Eleanor Sisulu, coordinator
in South Africa of the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition, an umbrella body for more than 200 Zimbabwean
non-governmental organisations (NGOs).
"We could
have a situation similar to Burma, except that Zimbabwe is a landlocked
country and is dependant on its neighbours." Zimbabwe also
depends on South Africa and Mozambique for its power needs.
To prop
up
Paul
Wolfowitz, former president of the World Bank, noted in an article
in the Wall Street Journal on 25 June that the international community
would have to pledge its financial support to a new Zimbabwean government
in a post-Mugabe scenario.
Even if Tsvangirai
were to become president, "he would still face a daunting set
of problems: restoring an economy in which hyperinflation has effectively
destroyed the currency and unemployment is a staggering 70 percent;
getting emergency food aid to millions who are at risk of starvation
and disease; promoting reconciliation after the terrible violence;
and undoing Mugabe's damaging policies without engendering a violent
backlash," Wolfowitz wrote.
The World Bank
would only begin lending money to the Zimbabwean government after
it had put in place a recovery programme, with a strategy to clear
its arrears of just under US$0.6 billion it owes the bank, Mungai
Lenneiye, the bank's acting country manager, told IRIN earlier this
year.
Lenneiye said
the Zimbabwean government had already outlined a draft "Stabilisation
and Short-Term Recovery Programme" (SSTRP) for implementation
in 2008, aimed at achieving macro-economic stability and restoring
production.
"The SSTRP
outlines government's intentions to move towards a unified exchange
rate, removal of price distortions in the economy, and restoration
of agricultural production as a first step to bring down the very
high rate of inflation," Lenneiye said. Zimbabwe's inflation
rate is estimated at well over a million percent.
If the SSTRP
is "successfully implemented, without major slippages, much
progress could be achieved within the following five years,"
Lenneiye noted. "Zimbabwe has an abundant supply of minerals,
rich agricultural land, and skilled personnel [although many have
left to work in South Africa, the UK and other countries with stable
economies] and this is a good basis for a quick turn-around in the
right policy environment."
The turn-around
would hinge on government's commitment to market-based economic
reform, Lenneiye said, "but it can be greatly assisted by the
availability of a predictable inflow of Balance of Payments support,
restored donor assistance, and foreign direct investments [including
remittances from Zimbabweans in the diaspora]".
Clancy said
the EU would have to look at "the short, medium and long term,
and structure assistance accordingly. The immediate needs would
be the humanitarian sphere, and we would need to evaluate, with
our humanitarian partners like the UN, to see where emergency funding
would be needed."
According to
a recent joint assessment by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
and the World Food Programme, at least five million Zimbabweans
will be in need of food by September. "Zimbabwe does not have
the capacity to feed its people," said Richard.
Clancy maintained
that "Zimbabwe has the potential to recover reasonably quickly
from the crisis, but it really does depend on factors that are outside
of our control", and said a donor conference to help Zimbabwe
recover could be possible.
Wolfowitz suggested
that a non-Western institution, such as the African Development
Bank, might take the lead in summoning a Friends of Zimbabwe conference
that could include wealthy oil-producing countries, and possibly
China and India, which have shown a new interest in Africa.
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