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Fringe
political parties emerge as polls draw closer
Njabulo Ncube, Financial Gazette
September 14, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200709130685.html
NOW you see them, now
you don't. When newspapers or newsrooms are inundated with calls
from nondescript fellows, brandishing usually badly written press
statements, you do not have to be a soothsayer to know an election
is imminent.
It is four months before
voting begins, and the country's fringe political parties are once
again emerging from hibernation that began after the last elections
in 2005.
Once again, editors and
journalists must live with the constant harangues of small-time
political players, each desperate to have stories published on their
activities - especially on the front page.
There are different varieties
of parties; some come out in the open as elections approach, while
others are born just before ballots are cast.
A new party, the Zimbabwe
People's Party (ZPP), has joined a long list of the country's fringe
political parties, announcing its arrival in a series of press advertisements.
"Fight Poverty,
join the Zimbabwe People's Party (ZPP) For Genuine Democracy,"
reads one of its recent advertisement.
Log on to its website,
and an impressive logo pops up, accompanied by a thumbs up sign,
encircled with more slogans, suspiciously Macheso-like: "Zvakanaka
Zvakadaro, Kuhle Kunjalo, It's good like that."
The site offers
nothing more.
But ZPP's splashing
of expensive advertisements has already sent tongues wagging, with
the usual suspicion that the party could be a ploy by the Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO) to further split the opposition
vote.
Another new party to
emerge recently is the Patriotic Union of Matabeleland (PUMA), launched
in Bulawayo under the theme "Nothing for Us, Without Us".
ZPP and PUMA join a club
of other smaller parties, led by veteran fringe man Paul Siwela,
who leads the ZAPU Federal Party, and Wurayayi Zembe of the Democratic
Party.
Others in this class
are the United People's Party (UPP), launched in June this year
by Daniel Shumba, the businessman and former ZANU PF chairman for
Masvingo province.
Shumba launched
his project after becoming disenchanted with ZANU PF. He was one
of six provincial chairmen suspended by the ruling party over the
infamous Tsholotsho Indaba. He later resigned.
"The UPP
together with all Zimbabweans will restore the vibrant and diversified
economy in a democratic, law-abiding Zimbabwe. Unite with us, and
together we will unite our nation," the party said in a half
page colour advert on the day of its launch.
The UPP symbol
shows two hands, joined together, promising to lead the country
"from hopelessness to hope, from poverty to prosperity, from
terror to well-being, from dictatorship to democracy."
Siwela, whose
party has participated in parliamentary and presidential elections
since 2000, blames the low profile of his party and other small
opposition parties on both the public and private media.
"We refuse to be
called a fringe political party or a fly-by-night party. This is
nonsensical and a myth created by the media," Siwela told The
Financial Gazette last week.
He said his ZAPU FP -
which campaigns for federalism - was in talks with other "like-minded"
groups to forge a united front for 2008, so as to avoid the "Kenyan
Syndrome" - giving the ruling party victory by splitting the
opposition vote.
"We are pushing
for a broad alliance with other opposition political players, but
at the moment I am not in a position to disclose their identities,"
he said.
There are more parties.
Little known Zimbabwe Youth in Alliance (ZIYA) has dismally lost
all elections since its formation on September 15, 2003.
It has courted controversy
with disclosures that its youthful leader Chawaona Kanoti, a University
of Zimbabwe law graduate, once worked in President Robert Mugabe's
Office as an intelligence operative.
In 2005, ZIYA candidates
unsuccessfully contested in Chirumhanzu, Harare and Buhera, while
its leader Kanoti was trounced in the Mabvuku-Tafara senate elections
in November 2005.
Then enter the United
People's Movement. It has been linked to Tsholotsho independent
Member of Parliament and former government spin-doctor Jonathan
Moyo (MP) and former Zvishavane MP Pearson Mbalekwa.
Late last year, it threatened
to change the landscape of opposition politics in Zimbabwe, proclaiming
it would "rock the nation".
"Victory is certain",
its advertisements proclaimed.
Its symbol was a rugged
piece of rock, representing, it explained, the "rock solid
foundations" of the Great Zimbabwe Monuments, the pillars of
Zimbabwe's spiritual home at Njelele in Matopos, the party said.
But this flamboyant marketing
has not won the parties much respect.
"It is good to have
different voices, but these should be from genuine origins,"
said Takura Zhangazha, a political commentator.
"Small political
parties should be allowed to exist but we are in a political environment
that requires them now to take a back seat and join forces with
a progressive opposition party with a realistic chance of delivering
change," said Zhangazha.
Analysts said the political
landscape in Zimbabwe makes it difficult for political parties to
grow and eventually dislodge ZANU PF, a revolutionary party that
has ruled the country since independence from Britain in 1980.
They said the ruling
party, whose stiffest challenge came from the Movement for Democratic
Change, which is now in disarray following its split in 2005, uses
state organs such as the police, the CIO and army to fortify its
hold on power.
ZANU PF has
also made it difficult for smaller parties to access external funding
except for the meager resources provided under the Political
Parties (Finance) Act and has shut out the opposition from the
public media.
And because most of the
opposition parties remain in the periphery, ZANU PF has always enjoyed
the lion's share of the budget.
"The promulgation
of laws such as the Public
Order and Security Act, the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Interception
of Communications Act, etc, combine to make it impossible for
smaller parties to thrive," said one analyst.
"Some of the faces
behind the smaller parties are also not convincing, which explains
why people are not interested in them. It also appears that some
of them are just out to get donor funding, which is later converted
for use by individuals," added the analyst.
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