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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
For
once, let's have free, fair elections
Zimbabwe
Standard
January 20, 2008
http://allafrica.com/stories/200801210785.html
By the calculations
of most neutral observers, preparations for the harmonised elections
are so behind schedule, it is unrealistic - and undemocratic - for
them to go ahead in March
If they do, then there
are likely to be so many glitches the results may not be a true
reflection of the voters' wishes.
Only Zanu PF could benefit
from a March election. The party can move swiftly into action once
the electoral procedures are switched into motion.
This is because, as the
ruling party, it controls most of the levers of the election process.
Some of the provisions may have been amended to give them a semblance
of independence. But no-one should be under any illusion that Zanu
PF could accept vital procedures which denied it an upperhand.
The two formations of
the MDC are still griping about entering elections under the old
Constitution. SA President Thabo Mbeki's visit last week appears
to have hit a dead-end: Zanu Pf is not interested in a new Constutition.
That much-amended
document, even with Amendment
No.18, is still more Zanu PF-friendly than anything else
For the opposition, a
home-grown Constitution is vital for the obvious reason that, like
other people with the experience of dealing with Zanu PF, they don't
trust the ruling party.
Some critics of the opposition
scoff at their threat of a boycott. They insist the divisions in
the opposition are so deep-seated they know they would still lose
if the elections were postponed to June, however level the playing
field may be.
Zanu PF has always preferred
to have no competition in an election, a hangover from the days
of the one-party system of the 1980s.
For once, we urge the
party to think outside the box - the box of self-interest, self-glorification
and self-absorption.
Let the leaders think
of their country, and not the party, first, for a change. If the
party is as popular as they keep claiming it is, then there should
be no legitimate reason not to accept a free and fair contest.
We say this even bearing
in mind President Mugabe's retort to earlier appeals for a postponement:
if anybody is not ready for a March poll, tough luck. This is not
consistent with a party genuinely committed to democracy.
Clearly, Zanu PF is aware
its political platform for these elections is hardly spectacular.
Inflation is the highest
in the world, unemployment is among the highest in the world, life
expectancy, at 34, is among the lowest in the world.
The cash crisis has brought
misery to many ordinary people. What they must view as the government's
uncaring attitude was the reluctance to confront the naked truth:
the economy needs massive reform if we are to return to the good
old days of a vibrant export-oriented currency much admired even
by some developed countries.
The "cry-baby"
syndrome, blaming almost everything on alleged Western sanctions,
no longer impresses most citizens. They see all around them vivid
evidence of official corruption, seen in the ostentatious lifestyles
of the ruling elite. They know who to blame.
Most voters would cringe
at the prospect of returning to power a party with such a terrible
record of failure and corruption. They will be anxious to give someone
else a chance to try their policies.
Zanu PF will never lose
its status as a liberation movement.
But the party
has failed to give the people the good life it promised them in
1980. It should allow the voters to decide in a free and fair election
if another party/parties can improve their lives.
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