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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Election Watch Issue 11 - 2012
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
November 02, 2012
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Chinamasa
'coup' threat provokes outrage in the media
Remarks by Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa that his party and the military would
not accept Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai as president in the
event that he wins forthcoming national elections attracted condemnation
from a wide cross-section of the Zimbabwean society in the month.
Chinamasa, who
is also ZANU PF's chief negotiator in the Global
Political Agreement (GPA), was seen on BBC World Television
making these comments in an interview with the corporation's
Africa Correspondent, Andrew Harding.
Notably, the
official state media censored Chinamasa's utterances, in what
appeared to be an attempt to conceal information that has the potential
to damage ZANU PF's image ahead of elections.
The private
media widely reported Chinamasa as having told the BBC that ZANU
PF and the army would not accept a "foreign-sponsored"
victory for Tsvangirai because the MDC-T leader had allegedly promised
to reverse the gains of independence (NewsDay & Daily News,
15/10).
Chinamasa hinted
that the military would stage a coup if Tsvangirai won the elections:
"Now if anyone is going to say: 'When I come into power
I'm going to reverse that', they (the military) have
every right to say: 'Please, you are asking for trouble'.
You will be asking for trouble".
Asked to clarify
his use of the word "trouble", Chinamasa told the BBC
to make its own interpretation: "He (Tsvangirai) will be asking
for trouble to seek to reverse the land reform programme. There
is no one who is going to accept any enslavement. And if those countries
impose for him (Tsvangirai) to win, that result will not be acceptable.
We will not accept it. We will just not accept it. Isn't that
clear?"
The private
media viewed Chinamasa's utterances as not only a threat to democracy,
but also a reflection of ZANU PF's contempt for Tsvangirai
and his MDC-T party.
These media
warned that such comments had the potential to spark a civil war
and urged Mugabe to accept any poll outcome to preserve his legacy.
The private
media also reported the MDC-T, civic groups, and several political
commentators expressing outrage over Chinamasa's comments,
arguing that such utterances vindicated their demand for security
sector reform before the next elections.
In one such
case, the private media reported the PM's spokesman, Luke
Tamborinyoka, saying his boss would take steps to force Chinamasa
to retract the "coup" threat (Daily News & NewsDay,
15/10). Tamborinyoka declared: "Chinamasa will regret that
statement for the rest of his life. Chinamasa should know that there
is nothing that is bigger than the people's mandate. The ballot
will always be superior to the bullet. It is a treasonous statement
as it implies that the people's will amounts to nothing".
Even worse,
the private media considered Chinamasa's threat to be reminiscent
of those made by top military officials in the past, especially
the one expressed in the run-up to the 2002 presidential elections
- that Zimbabwe's state security chiefs would not salute
anyone without liberation war credentials, in apparent reference
to Tsvangirai (Daily News & NewsDay, 15/10).
Barely a week
after Chinamasa expressed his intolerance of an MDC-T election victory,
the private media reported ZANU PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo telling
South Africa's e-News Channel Africa that it would be "messy"
if Tsvangirai won the elections, warning that "hardliners"
would find it difficult to hand over power to the MDC-T leader (Daily
News, NewsDay & The Standard, 18, 19 & 21/10).
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