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Manuel's
outburst misses the point
Peta
Thornycroft
August 28, 2007
Trevor Manuel got hot
under the collar in parliament last Tuesday, saying the best South
Africa could do about the crisis in Zimbabwe would be to encourage
its citizens to solve their own problems. Quite.
Then, getting more irritated,
he brought Iraq into the debate: "For those who don't understand,
I ask that President Bush recruit them and send them to Iraq. Then
they will understand what regime change is about." Quite.
But Manuel has a short
memory. That is certainly not what Zimbabweans wanted - regime change
the George Bush way. They wanted regime change the other way, through
the ballot box.
Very, very regretfully,
South Africa chose to impede that.
The South African government's
election observer group, led by its own election supremo, Brigalia
Bam, overlooked overwhelming evidence that Mugabe's 2002 victory
in the presidential election was dishonestly won.
The voice of the South
African observer group carried the day in Africa. Even worse, South
Africa decided at least 10 days before the elections that the poll
would be adjudicated as having been "credible and legitimate".
Patricia de Lille was
the only election observer in the Harare High Court to witness yet
another argument over disgraceful new election laws just 11 hours
before polling booths opened.
South African observers
saw well-behaved queues of people determined to vote, however long
it took, but who would be unable to exercise their democratic right
because Mugabe had dramatically reduced the number of polling stations
in urban opposition strongholds.
Manuel may have forgotten
that Brig-Gen Douglas Nyikayaramba from Zimbabwe National Army headquarters
organised the army to run the presidential election of 2002.
He claimed to have retired
from the military at the time.
After the poll he was
given a previously white-owned farm at Nyabira, 40km north of Harare,
and is now commander of 2 Brigade at Cranborne Barracks.
The election machinery
which Nyikayaramba controlled also delayed people who eventually
got to the front of the endless queues to cast their votes in high
density areas. At one queue I watched it took 75 minutes for a woman
to vote.
MDC President Morgan
Tsvangirai immediately challenged Mugabe's victory in court.
More than two years after
the election and seven court orders later, he eventually got access
to ballot boxes in 12 constituencies.
The documented results
of the search showed that the results announced by the election
"command centre" run by the army in Harare did not coincide
with the ballot papers in the boxes.
There was also some double
voting, 2 000 in one rural constituency, but no ballot box stuffing.
The command centre was
off-limits to journalists.
The South African observers
certainly did not check out the command centre in 2002, and did
not even know there was a command centre in the 2005 general election.
Despite voting delays
- tens of thousands in Harare never even got to vote - secret, last-minute
voter registration, appalling violence against opposition polling
agents, candidates, supporters etc, Tsvangirai actually won the
2002 presidential poll by a small margin.
Mugabe's 15% victory
was manufactured by the army in the command centre.
So, Zimbabweans had tried
very hard to bring about democratic regime change.
Maybe it is recent events
Manuel was thinking about when he became cross in parliament last
week: that many Zimbabweans who want democratic regime change have
not been doing their cause much favour recently.
The vibrant young MDC
had already started sliding into disunity even before the presidential
poll, but certainly we, the foreign press, did not know that.
The first known intra-party
violence took place in June 2001, when a young woman activist in
Harare was beaten up by thugs loyal to Tsvangirai, accused of being
sister to Secretary-General Welshman Ncube. She was not his sister,
she just shared the same common surname.
There were other violent
episodes within the MDC in 2004 and 2005, we later found out. We
discovered there were cliques and tribalism and vast sums of money
had gone missing.
People were accusing
each other of working for Zanu-PF and or President Thabo Mbeki,
stealing farms, secretly owning shopping malls, doing secret deals
with then British prime minister Tony Blair at the G8 summit in
Gleneagles etc.
Tsvangirai violated the
MDC constitution over a narrow vote in his sharply divided national
executive committee supporting participation in senate elections
in 2005.
He also said "so
be it" if the MDC split as a result. He also lied to the press
about that vote.
His call for a boycott
of senate elections in November 2005 was enormously successful.
But there was, as usual,
no follow-up, and so the momentum disappeared and Mugabe became
the winner as he could use the senate seats further to extend his
patronage to a new bunch of Zanu-PF cronies.
And it has been downhill
all the way since then. Most civil society organisations dropped
their neutrality and supported Tsvangirai after the split and their
donors did not seem to mind.
The new umbrella organisation,
Save Zimbabwe, which seems to have resources, is largely an extension
of the Tsvangirai faction.
Donors chose sides, mostly
Tsvangirai's, even if they believed he had failed to provide effective
leadership.
Tsvangirai scuppered
an election co-operation agreement between the two factions in May
after 10 months of negotiations.
The other faction, led
by Arthur Mutambara, was exasperated and will field its own candidates
in the next polls due in March. At a recent press conference Mutambara
lashed out at Tsvangirai, which embarrassed his colleagues.
So the split shows no
hope of being papered over in an election alliance, and each faction
will put up its own candidates.
The winner will be Mugabe,
who may now feel confident that a deeply divided opposition means
he does not have to beat people up or cheat to win the elections
next March.
Maybe this is what Manuel
was thinking about.
He must have forgotten
what went on in 2002 when his colleagues chose Mugabe's violence
and cheating over the will of the majority of Zimbabwean people.
- Mercury Foreign Service
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