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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
Zimbabwe-s
very American election
Gene C. Gerard
April 04, 2005
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Apr05/Gerard0404.htm
Last week, the African nation of Zimbabwe
held parliamentary elections. It was viewed, both within the country and
by foreign observers, as a referendum on the country’s elderly and dictatorial
ruler, President Robert Mugabe, who has been in power since 1980. Mr.
Mugabe’s party, the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu
PF), won 78 seats in the election, while the opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, garnered only 41. Both the opposition party and
independent observers have accused President Mugabe of stealing the election.
Morgan Tsvangarai, the leader of the Movement
for Democratic Change, said Mr. Mugabe won only through the use of intimidation
tactics and vote-rigging. The U.S. State Department called the election
"seriously flawed". Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice stated, "the
election was not free and fair". Yet ironically, it appears as if Zimbabwe’s
election was very American-like, if our election in 2004 is any indication.
President Mugabe and his party attempted
to manipulate the media. His government essentially runs all media outlets
in Zimbabwe. Consequently, coverage of his administration and his party’s
campaign was heavily biased. Also, a law was enacted in November that
made it illegal to practice journalism without a government-issued license,
and subjected anyone guilty of this offense to a prison sentence. In February,
his government barred foreign journalists from reporting on the impending
election without governmental approval, which was rarely given.
Since our own election last November, we’ve
learned that the Bush administration also attempted to manipulate the
media. Various journalists have admitted to being paid by the government
to promote President Bush’s agenda. In addition, the administration has
admitted to creating fake "news" stories, with actors portraying
reporters, to promote President Bush’s policies. The stories were distributed
to television media outlets to use in their nightly news segments.
President Mugabe’s government attempted to
disenfranchise voters. Absentee ballots were only mailed to civil servants,
diplomats, and uniformed members of the military and security forces living
abroad. Yet there are over one million of Zimbabwe’s citizens in other
African countries. Likewise, the Bush administration took great efforts
to ensure that military personnel serving abroad had every opportunity
to vote. But other Americans living abroad, particularly in Europe, had
enormous difficulties obtaining absentee ballots in time to vote, if at
all. One report of American’s living in Rome indicated that as many as
90 percent of those who requested the ballots did not receive them in
time to vote.
According to nongovernmental organizations
that monitored Zimbabwe’s election, there were significant problems at
polling stations. Election officers who were appointed by the Mugabe government
were accused of barring the opposition party’s voting monitors from polling
stations. As a result, by some reports, as many as ten percent of Zimbabweans
who attempted to vote were turned away, on the grounds that they lacked
proper identification, or were voting in the wrong district. Additionally,
when an election complaint was lodged, there were not enough independent
judges to rule on the complaints, given that most had been appointed by
President Mugabe or were members of his party.
In our election last November there were
various complaints of problems at voting polls. Many of these complaints
occurred in Ohio. Republican polling monitors in Ohio outnumbered Democratic
monitors by almost two-to-one. Consequently, when Republican monitors
objected to someone attempting to vote, there were not enough Democratic
monitors to refute the objection, resulting in the disenfranchisement
of some voters. Also, virtually all voting complaints in Ohio were resolved
by their Secretary of State, J. Kenneth Blackwell, who was also the co-chairman
of President Bush’s re-election campaign in Ohio, and could hardly be
regarded as independent.
Other similarities between the two elections
are equally compelling. In the 2002 Zimbabwe elections, President Mugabe’s
supporters were accused of killing hundreds of opponents. In order to
demonstrate that the elections last week were fair, he invited hundreds
of foreign observers to watch the elections. After our questionable election
in 2000, the U.S. State Department, for the first time ever, allowed the
United Nations to officially monitor the 2004 election. President Mugabe’s
party bused-in loyal audiences whenever they held a campaign rally, in
order to pack their campaign sites. Although not widely known, the Bush/Cheney
’04 Campaign never allowed the general public to attend any of President
Bush’s rallies last fall. All attendees were required to have an invitation,
and the invitations were only mailed to registered Republicans in the
county in which Mr. Bush was speaking.
Both presidents manipulated the electorate
in grotesque ways in order to win their elections. By most estimates,
half of all Zimbabweans are undernourished. Starvation is a sad and common
part of life in that country. But last year, President Mugabe ordered
the World Food Program and Save the Children Federation to discontinue
distributing food aid. He announced that the country had become self-sufficient,
and that his government would now allocate food resources. This forced
Zimbabweans to rely almost entirely on the government for food. Consequently,
Mr. Mugabe’s government began to distribute food only to those who had
a voter registration card showing that they were members of his ruling
party. In fact, the party routinely handed out food at their rallies.
Similarly, President Bush played on the fear
and worries of Americans in order to ensure his re-election. His campaign
relentlessly insisted that another terrorist attack was inevitable if
not imminent, and that only Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney could save us. They
portrayed Senator Kerry as weak on defense and confused on national security.
Vice President Cheney infamously stated in a town hall meeting in Ohio
last October that the greatest threat we now faced was a nuclear or chemical
weapons attack in one of our cities, and that Mr. Kerry was not tough
enough to prevent it.
The Bush administration, and indeed many
Americans, love to hold up America as a beacon to the rest of the world.
They insist that we are the ultimate democracy to which totalitarian governments,
third-world nations, and banana republics should attempt to emulate. If
that’s the case, Zimbabwe is already very American.
*Gene C. Gerard teaches American history
at a small college in suburban Dallas, and is a contributing author to
the forthcoming book Americana at War. His previous articles have appeared
in Dissident Voice, Political Affairs Magazine, The Free Press, Intervention
Magazine, The Modern Tribune, and The Palestine Chronicle. He can be reached
at genecgerard@comcast.net
Dissident Voice is available at www.dissidentvoice.org
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