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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe:
the writing's on the wall
Daniel Howden, The Independent (UK)
March 31, 2008
View story on
the Independent UK'S website
The writing was on the
wall for Robert Mugabe last night. It was pinned to the side of
polling tents, posted on school fences and written on the walls
of community halls. The election results that Zimbabwe's president
had made every effort to rig were coming in against him. First to
go were his chief lieutenants as, one by one, they lost their parliamentary
seats. The list read like a Who's Who of corruption, fraud, intimidation
and robbery: Joyce Mujuru, the vice-president and mistress of a
vast confiscated estate outside the capital; Patrick Chinamasa the
man who perverted the justice system to serve the regime; and Didymus
Mutasa the man who amassed millions of pounds worth of stolen farms.
At least nine of Mr Mugabe's politburo, his inner circle, were out
of a job according to official results posted at polling stations
in their own constituencies. As evidence emerged of what appeared
to be a landslide for opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's
electoral commission - Mugabe placemen all - were hiding
out in the capital, refusing to release results of the presidential
poll. What nobody could stop were independently verified, lawfully
reported parliamentary and senate results as the count finished
at each of the 9,000 polling stations nationwide. And the early
results were stunning.
Provisional findings,
leaked to The Independent last night by a senior source at the electoral
commission, indicated that Mr Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change had taken 191 of 210 parliamentary seats, with the remainder
split between the ruling Zanu PF and the smaller MDC faction backing
the ruling party defector Simba Makoni. Were those results to be
reflected in the presidential contest, as expected, it would deliver
a resounding first round victory to Mr Tsvangirai, a former union
leader, and bring down the curtain on the only president Zimbabwe
has ever known. There was not a word from the man who turned one
of Africa's most promising economies into an impoverished, intimidated
and emptying country. Or from the man who withstood beatings, imprisonment
and death threats but who, last night, appeared set to replace him.
For that to happen, Mr Tsvangirai would need to collect at least
51 per cent of the vote, otherwise the two leading candidates would
go to a run-off in three weeks' time. Throughout the day, state
television ignored the most important election since independence
in 1980, broadcasting a bizarre mixture of cartoons, church sermons
and 1970s football matches.
At the MDC headquarters
in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, the excitement was palpable
as the whiteboards covering the flaking walls began to fill up with
poll counts - numbers that could finally amount to change.
Into the middle of the melee was Dorcas Sibanda, a single mother
with four young children, and also one of the newly elected MDC
MPs for Bulawayo. "In my constituency, [Mugabe] got nothing,"
she said. "We knew people had made up their mind, we went door
to door, and people said he had to go. If he won't go, it will cause
chaos, people know what has happened. He needs to pack his bags
and leave the State House." Pausing for hugs and high-fives
with colleagues, she continued: "They're going into the garbage
dump of history where they belong." Outside, a crowd began
to gather and a pick-up truck with speakers parked near by to provide
the soundtrack. Activists waved flags and one of them shouted: "This
is what we wanted, the country has come back to its owners."
Passing drivers honked their horns as people in MDC T-shirts danced
in the traffic. An elderly white couple in a 4x4 rolled down their
windows to wave at the dancers who saluted them in unison with their
arms raised. A truck full of riot police rolled by showing little
interest, with one officer even smiling at the party that was starting.
The head of the city's riot police later returned to ask officials
to tone down celebrations, promising an announcement later in the
afternoon.
By nightfall,
there was still no word. The official silence on the result was
stoking tension in the capital, Harare, where police were deployed
in the poor townships. Security chiefs gave their full backing to
the octogenarian president in the run-up to Saturday's vote and
warned that they would not accept an opposition victory. Even the
limited observers that the Mugabe regime had allowed to monitor
the election were yesterday declaring serious problems in its conduct.
The head of the Pan-African Parliament observer mission said he
was sure most results were known and warned against a delay in releasing
them. "We are trying to exercise as much constraint as possible
so as not to contribute to the deteriorating security situation,"
said Noel Kututwa, explaining why his Zimbabwe
Elections Support Network, an independent monitoring organization,
was not releasing any results. "Clearly the delay is fuelling
speculation that something might be going on." The silence
was filled with wild rumours: the "old man" had left the
country; the military had convened an emergency council; Mr Tsvangirai
would declare victory. One report that could be confirmed was that
a senior ruling party member, Elliot Manyika, had shot and killed
at least one person at a polling station and had been placed under
arrest.
Previous elections have
followed a similar pattern with early results from urban centres
appearing to favour the opposition before returns from rural voters
who make up three quarters of the electorate have gone to the ruling
party. David Coltart, who won a senate seat for the smaller MDC
faction that was backing Mr Makoni, a Zanu defector and former finance
minister, sounded a note of caution. "It looks like a landslide
for Morgan but Mugabe is unpredictable," said Mr Coltart, a
respected white Zimbabwean lawyer. And yet everywhere yesterday,
people were convinced that this time it would be different. They
ignored Mr Mugabe's divide and rule on racial lines and on seeing
a white face on the streets, smiling people would stand up at bus
stops or wave from windows, all saying the same thing, "We
are winning".
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