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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Election
aftermath: Zimbabwe braced for Mugabe crackdown
The Independent (UK)
April 13, 2008
View this story
on The Independent website
It always seemed unlikely.
Would President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, a man who has long shed
any pretence of bowing to international opinion or the electoral
verdict of his people, really agree to go to a summit of southern
African leaders at which his rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, would be
treated as an equal?
For a man as hugely proud
as Mr Mugabe, such a confrontation would have been uncharacteristic
indeed. Especially when yesterday's gathering in Lusaka, capital
of Zambia, had been called by President Levy Mwanawasa, the one
southern African leader to break the region's code of omertá
concerning criticism of Zimbabwe. Mr Mwanawasa, the current head
of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), had likened
conditions in his southern neighbour to the Titanic, heading for
disaster.
So when it was initially
announced that Mr Mugabe had accepted the invitation to yesterday's
gathering, Zimbabweans experienced a wave of hope. If he was prepared
to attend, surely it meant he was at last acknowledging defeat in
the presidential election held two weeks ago? Mr Tsvangirai's claim
to have beaten Mr Mugabe decisively has been accepted by most international
monitors, and even privately by elements of the ruling Zanu-PF party
- but the question has been whether he gained more than half the
votes cast.
The MDC leader says he
has; others are not so sure, believing a run-off will have to be
held. Despite growing unease, as the days went by without the result
being announced, and reports of violent retaliation in areas where
the MDC had gained ground, it appeared that Mr Mugabe would agree
in Lusaka to a second round of voting, with some measure of international
supervision. If he was willing to be seen on the same platform as
Mr Tsvangirai before an audience of his fellow regional leaders,
he could hardly concede anything less.
By yesterday, however,
Mr Mugabe was back to his usual self. On Friday the government had
said there was no need for a summit in Zambia, because the election
totals were still being tallied, and three hard-line ministers were
dispatched instead while Mr Mugabe remained at home, forcing the
SADC's designated mediator, President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa,
to come to him. A clearer sign of the failure of Mr Mbeki's attempts
to deal with Zimbabwe through "quiet diplomacy" could
scarcely be imagined.
Despite the growing problems
that Zimbabwe's crisis has caused for his own country, where three
million Zimbabweans have fled, Mr Mbeki still appears hidebound
by the revolutionary solidarity forged during the liberation wars
of the last century. Where any other leader might have felt humiliated
by Mr Mugabe's intransigence, the South African President reacted
as he has always done: denying there was a problem and calling for
patience.
Jacob Zuma, the leader
of Mr Mbeki's own ANC party and his heir-apparent, finally lost
patience with this approach last week, calling for Zimbabwe to publish
the election result without delay. But the South African President
would have been aware that Mr Zuma and Mr Mwanawasa are in a minority
within SADC, where countries such as Namibia and Angola still hold
fast to the old rhetoric of anti-colonialist "struggle".
What happens in Zimbabwe will remain in Mr Mugabe's hands.
The unco-ordinated response
of the Zimbabwean establishment to Mr Mwanawasa's summit call -
first saying Mr Mugabe would take part, only to backtrack - might
indicate some confusion in senior Zanu-PF ranks after an election
in which the government's unpopularity was clearly demonstrated.
The failure to declare the results of the presidential election
has paralysed much of the civil service and business, with many
government and private-sector employees failing to turn up to work
in recent days.
But all the signs are
that Mr Mugabe is preparing to deal with this crisis the same way
he has handled every other challenge to his authority in his 28
years of rule: with intimidation and violence, regardless of the
consequences. Enough police will be deployed to keep the main urban
centres quiet while the rural areas are targeted. And the blows
are expected to fall hardest in constituencies where Zanu-PF won,
or came close to winning, two weeks ago.
The reason for this apparent
paradox is that Mr Mugabe has long dispensed with the support of
the minority Ndebele group, whose political resistance was crushed
in a military campaign in the 1980s. At least 20,000 people were
killed in that crackdown. Ever since, the people of Matabeleland,
whose largest city is Bulawayo, have said Mr Mugabe will not go
until his own group, the majority Shona, overthrow him.
Conscious of this, Zanu-PF
has always reacted most viciously to any sign that the MDC is eroding
the ruling party's base of support in the provinces around Harare,
the capital, and down the eastern half of the country. These areas
had not experienced mass intimidation until 2000, the year Mr Mugabe
unexpectedly lost a referendum on extending his presidential powers.
What followed bears an
ominous similarity to the current situation. After a pause during
which Mr Mugabe appeared to accept the result, chaos was let loose
across the country. White-owned farms were invaded by people claiming
to be landless "war veterans", even though most were children
or had not yet been born when the liberation war ended. Gangs of
thugs went around villages herding people to meetings at which they
were forced to chant Zanu-PF slogans, and suspected opposition supporters
were brutally beaten.
It is from this time
on that Mr Mugabe has come to be seen as a merciless dictator, impervious
to criticism. He blames all setbacks on British imperialism. It
took the sustained brutality of the present decade - and the plight
of white farmers - for the international media to decide that Mr
Mugabe was a monster.
In 2000, rural Shonas
were told that they had voted the wrong way, and warned of the consequences
if it happened again. The subsequent election, held after a three-month
delay, showed that they had received the message: Zanu-PF won a
narrow but decisive victory. In the election after that, Zanu-PF
won a two-thirds majority, allowing Mr Mugabe to amend the constitution
to his taste.
The urban areas
have suffered bouts of intimidation, most importantly the Murambatsvina
("clear out the trash") campaign in 2005, which drove
out street traders and the unemployed from the capital, forcing
many back to the rural areas they had left to escape starvation.
But it is in the countryside that the tactics of oppression have
been constantly refined.
As the economy has slid
into ruin and food shortages have become endemic, areas that back
Zanu-PF get handouts of rations and implements to help with subsistence
farming. Opposition areas get nothing. In large areas of Zimbabwe,
the MDC did not dare to hold meetings during this election campaign
for fear of violence. And if there were clashes with MDC youths,
it was an opportunity for the police to round up party officials
and helpers.
With the crushing victory
of 2005 having been followed by a split in the MDC, which saw two
factions using the party name in this election, the government appears
to have become complacent about the outcome. As long as enough bribes
were handed out and the MDC kept in check, Zanu-PF believed, rural
voters in the north and east would deliver the desired result.
So desperate is life
for most Zimbabweans, however, with inflation having reached 100,000
per cent and the ravages of HIV/Aids having reduced life expectancy
for women to the lowest level in the world, that voters lost their
docility.
"The trouble is
that the results of the Assembly election have told Mugabe exactly
where to target his intimidation," said an opposition source.
"The areas that will suffer most are those where Zanu-PF narrowly
lost, or had its majority severely cut. In 2005 Mr Tsvangirai did
not win a rural seat outside Matabeleland. This time he won heavily
in the east and south, and picked up seats in Mashonaland [the north-east]
and Midlands areas. In his heartland, the three provinces of Mashonaland,
Zanu-PF is likely to attempt to shut out the MDC altogether. In
the rest of the country, they will have to try to batter down the
MDC's structures."
How this will be managed
was explained by the dissident policemen whose evidence has reached
The Independent on Sunday. They said they had been told to be ready
to deploy today or tomorrow, leading the opposition to surmise that
the government will announce the election result and name the date
for the second round once its forces are in place.
With their ranks swelled
by "war veterans", who will be given uniforms and official
police numbers, the policemen said they would be expected to campaign
openly for Zanu-PF in the second round. The party loyalists who
had joined them would report on any policemen unwilling to carry
out their orders, and certain areas would be shut off completely
to anyone entering from outside.
So far Mr Tsvangirai's
stance has been that he won the presidential election outright,
and that his party will not take part in any run-off. How he will
react if the government announces a second round is not known, but
the intimidation has already begun in rural areas north of the capital.
None of this should surprise
anyone who has watched Mr Mugabe's defiance of international opinion
previously. Yesterday's snubbing of the SADC summit makes it clear
that nothing but direct international pressure will divert the unfortunate
country's president from using force against his own people.
Days
of delay
Sunday State newspaper
reports that Mugabe has requested a recount "following revelations
of errors and miscalculations".
Monday - High
Court delays
decision on release of election results. MDC candidate Morgan
Tsvangirai meets South African Jacob Zuma, leader of the African
National Congress.
Tuesday - Commercial
Farmers Union reports invasions of 60 white-owned farms by Zanu-PF
forces. Five election officials accused of altering results in MDC's
favour are arrested.
Wednesday -
Southern African Development Community of 14 nations announces summit
on crisis. South African President Thabo Mbeki refuses to meet Tsvangirai.
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission lawyer George Chikumbirike tells court
it would be dangerous to force release of results.
Thursday - MDC
declares Tsvangirai will
not stand in a run-off.
Friday - Government
bans political rallies and arrests Tsvangirai's chief lawyer, Innocent
Chagonda. MDC says about 1,000 of its supporters have been arrested
or attacked since election. Zimbabwe
Election Support Network estimates
Tsvangirai has 47-52 per cent of the vote.
Saturday - Mugabe
meets Thabo Mbeki but refuses to attend regional summit.
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