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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Things
may go awry for Bob yet
Allister Sparks, The Star (SA)
March 05, 2008
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=18341
Despite Mbeki's inaction
and Mugabe's best efforts to skew the results, a surprise result
may wait in the wings
With the Zimbabwe
elections due in three weeks' time, observer teams might as well
write their verdicts now. The elections will not be free and fair.
They cannot be, for the conditions required for free electioneering
have not existed throughout the campaigning period. Despite five
years of President Thabo Mbeki's "quiet diplomacy" and
nearly a full year as official mediator
on behalf of SADC, not a single one of the SADC's specified
requirements for a free and fair election has been met by the Mugabe
regime. Opposition candidates are not able to campaign freely -
they and their supporters continue to be harassed, arrested, abducted,
beaten and killed. Some have had their homes burnt; their meetings
banned or broken up; the electoral rolls are in hopeless disorder,
which will allow thousands of dead, departed and other "ghost"
voters to cast ballots; food aid is being distributed though Zanu
PF offices to buy votes; the media are not free with the state-owned
newspapers, television and radio services hopelessly biased in favour
of Mugabe and his Zanu PF party; independent newspapers such as
the popular Daily News remain closed; and most independent journalists
have been hounded out of the country. Mugabe has even decreed that
only "friendly" observer teams will be allowed into the
country to monitor the elections, and if they run true to form they
will turn a blind eye to all these grotesque abuses and validate
the outcome.
All this reflects
shamefully on the SA government and the SADC as a whole. They have
failed miserably, politically and morally. Most shameful of all
has been the applause accorded Mbeki at last month's SADC summit
for his supposed
success in negotiating a deal between Zanu PF that would ensure
a free and fair election . . . and Deputy Foreign Minister Aziz
Pahad's echoing of that false claim of success back here in South
Africa. This was the sheerest sophistry. It was true, as Pahad said,
that the four negotiators - two representing Zanu PF and one each
from the Tsvangirai and Mutambara wings of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) - had reached agreement. But, as Pahad
added, "All that remains is for the agreement to be processed"
- well knowing there was no time for the agreement to be processed
into law before the election. We now know why the two Zanu PF negotiators
were so often late for scheduled meetings or missed them altogether,
and why Mugabe suddenly brought forward the election date. It was
all part of a carefully calibrated plan to filibuster the negotiations
to death, leaving no time for any agreement to be enacted before
polling day. Now the way is open for Mugabe to rig the elections
as he has before, and for the "friendly" SA and SADC observer
teams to validate the results once again. Nor will it help for local
apologists to say, as they have said before, that there wasn't much
else Mbeki could have done; that he tried his best in difficult
circumstances.
Nonsense. There was another
way, nor was it difficult to determine. Eleven months ago, when
Mbeki began his mediation effort on SADC's behalf, I suggested in
this column that he should intervene right away to forewarn Robert
Mugabe that unless he put an immediate stop to his vicious campaign
of physical assaults and restrictive decrees aimed at crushing the
political opposition in Zimbabwe, the SADC would have no option
but to pronounce the elections neither free nor fair. I urged him
further to spell out the implications of that to Mugabe - that SADC
would not then be able to validate his re-election or recognise
his new government. It would then be an illegitimate regime. Had
he done that, and made clear that he meant it by appointing an observer
team to monitor such activities over the whole period up to the
election, I believe it would have stopped Mugabe in his tracks.
Vain man that he is, one could think of few things Mugabe would
have feared more than being disavowed by the SADC. I also raised
the idea at an informal meeting in Pretoria with members of the
International Crisis Group headed by Gareth Evans, the former Australian
foreign minister, only to have a senior member of our government
who was present at the discussion shrug it off as preposterous.
Evans himself liked the idea. But all that is now water under the
bridge. The Mbeki initiative has failed lamentably and Mugabe will
rig things his way. Or will he? No thanks to Mbeki, this time things
could - just could - go awry for the Zimbabwean tyrant. Because
of the intervention of the Zanu PF rebel, Simba Makoni.
I don't think Makoni
can win. He has little in the way of a power base in the dominant
Shona clan structure and he has no electoral organization, but the
fact that he is the first senior member of Zanu PF ever to break
from the party at election time could sow confusion in the ranks.
It could even make the election-rigging process more difficult,
because suddenly no one is quite sure who is who in the Zanu PF
zoo. There are many members of Zanu PF, including some senior members,
who have long been disenchanted with Mugabe but have been afraid
to confront him. Now there is a breakaway candidate they could quietly
support without turning to the opposition. Mugabe may even be uncertain
of exactly who he can trust to do the rigging for him. Among Makoni's
potential supporters is the wealthy and influential Solomon Majuru,
the former chief of Mugabe's guerrilla army, whose wife Joyce is
vice president. Mugabe has publicly denounced Majuru as an enemy,
but it remains uncertain how much influence he still has over the
military which once revered him. Complicating matters further for
Mugabe is that there will be four elections in one - presidential,
legislative, provincial and local.
Sources in Zimbabwe tell
me Mugabe is concentrating almost exclusively on the presidential
election, which raises the possibility that a number of pro-Makoni
"sleepers" may make their way into Parliament on Zanu
PF tickets only to declare their true allegiance afterwards. Add
to that the possibility that Makoni will split the Zanu PF vote
to the MDC's advantage, particularly in the urban constituencies
where Mugabe's policies have caused the most pain, and the intriguing
possibility arises of Mugabe rigging his way to victory in the presidential
election only to find that the combined opposition has a majority
in Parliament. That would produce a Kenya situation, and while no
one wants to see bloodshed, the power split may be enough to ignite
some fire in the belly of Zimbabwe's passive populace and cause
them to drive their tyrant from office. At the very least, Makoni's
defection may mark the first crack in the Zanu PF edifice which
could see it begin to crumble in the aftermath of the election.
Such oligarchic movements have a way of collapsing swiftly once
the myth of solidarity is exposed.
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