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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
the electricity of hope
Jan Raath, The Times (UK)
March 29, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article3642530.ece
The first time I felt
this thing was in 1991, waiting outside the polling station in the
Zambian village of Mazabuka and asking wrinkled little men and women
coming out if they felt better after voting. Yes, they all said.
We want change. Within days, President Kaunda was gone, after 27
years of bumbling, benign dictatorship that brought nothing but
poverty.
Two years later I felt
it in the wet, lightless streets of Blantyre in Malawi at 4am, where
queues coiled endlessly round the buildings. I asked the people
waiting in silent determination what they were going to do. Change,
they said. And before long, Hastings Banda, the 100-year-old Life
President of the land of silent fear, was no longer president.
It is a delicious, thrilling
thing. It is best after many years of brutality and poverty, and
especially hopelessness: the more terrible, the better. It seems
to fill the air with positive ions, like rain. It spreads undetected
like radiation through entire populations.
Now I am feeling the
same thing here in Zimbabwe. Everyone I speak to says "change".
I gave a lift to a pastor this week and mentioned the elections
on Saturday. It loosed a flood of anger from the mild-mannered churchman,
who berated Robert Mugabe as "half-man, half-beast".
We want change now, he said. Others say, "the clock is ticking
fast", or "it is D-Day tomorrow".
We have had tantalising
snatches of this thing, this mood in the air, in the past eight
years: in the referendum in 2000 on a faked-up draft constitution
in which President Mugabe was beaten in a fair fight; in the last
three elections when people in the towns thought they prevailed
over the Mugabe regime, but the rural people were beaten raw to
stick their broken Xs where they were told, and had their lips sealed
about the barrowloads of premarked ballot papers stuffed into the
boxes.
But now in villages where
a white man is never seen, old crones for whom Mugabe was God are
saying "it is time for the husband to get a new wife",
and doing jigs at rallies with their hands stretched wide open for
the opposition MDC. There are posters with the beaming faces of
Morgan Tsvangirai and Simba Makoni on baobab trees that you thought
would wither before their shiny bark supported any likeness other
than Mugabe's.
The hopelessness that
there will never be change has been overtaken by the hopelessness
that things are so bad that the people don't care any more what
the men in power can do to them. A colleague witnessed a policeman
in a small town ordering a group of MDC supporters to disperse.
The leader of the group barked back at the policeman: "I am
starving, I have nothing, you can't do anything to me, we are not
listening to you, we are going on with our meeting." They
continued their banned meeting and the cop walked meekly away.
The enforcers, the policemen
with holes in their socks who extort bribes from motorists to pay
for supper, are also at that point. Two of the buses festooned with
MDC posters at Tsvangirai's rally on Sunday bore the name of the
owner on the side of the driver's door - it was the chief of a Harare
township police station.
The Herald, Harare's
daily paper that Goebbels would be proud of, reported this week
that a policeman had been arrested for poking his finger at the
chest of a youth wearing a Mugabe T-shirt and asking: "Why
are you wearing the shirt of the party of hunger?"
All this has happened
so fast, the fruit of so many different circumstances combining:
the hunger that makes you retch, the tragic absurdity of paying
five million Zimbabwe dollars for an egg, the queuing for half the
day at the ATM to withdraw money for your bus fare home. The imploding
of the rotting, ruling Zanu (PF), the violence that everyone was
waiting for ahead of the elections that never erupted. And Makoni,
who defied Mugabe, and the expectations that he would be found dead
by the end of the week but who instead goes on railing against the
old crocodile.
All these elements have
helped to create a gorgeous, rich, spurting flower. It is democracy
at its headiest. We are somewhere around the elusive "tipping
point".
The will for change is
virtually tangible. But Mugabe has defied it again and again, and
people have suffered for daring. He will try to cook this election
and is ready to hold on to power by mass murder. Whether his regime
can be overwhelmed by weight of numbers and emotion, whether the
enforcers still have the will to defend the man who offers only
far worse misery, remains to be seen.
The people of Kenya were
regarded as placid until President Kibaki stole the election last
year. Unlike Kenya, Zimbabwe has no serious tribal animosity. The
only enemy is Mugabe.
Jan Raath has been reporting
from Zimbabwe since 1975
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