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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Exit
Mugabe
Stephen Chan, Prospect Magazine
April 02, 2008
http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10124
Robert Mugabe,
it is said, contemplated conceding defeat with a degree of grace,
but was pressured by his army generals to fight to the end. But
even with the slow and determined efforts to bias the counting of
results in Mugabe's favour, it steadily became clear that the scale
of the rigging required would never win the support of even Zimbabwe's
staunchest and most patient allies. Then the generals discussed
a coup, meaning that they themselves would ditch Mugabe, or make
him their puppet—which, to an extent, he has been for some
time. Then word came up, hard and clear from South Africa, that
they were not to do that. South African diplomatic pressure has
had a huge influence in turning back the course of what would have
been a rigged election towards a murky compromise negotiated in
back rooms, but one which might still see the retirement of Robert
Mugabe.
I am writing
this late in the afternoon of 2nd April. The parliamentary seats
have been almost fully counted. It is still neck and neck, but even
if Mugabe's Zanu-PF party wins a slender majority, Morgan Tsvangirai's
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) should win enough court challenges
overturning initial results to secure an eventual majority. The
painstakingly slow announcement of results—both to accommodate
the attempt to rig and to allow time for compromise diplomacy—gave
Zanu-PF huge majorities in those rural areas where opposition party
agents and observers were thin on the ground. The constituencies
that were won by the MDC were done so with slender majorities. In
this way, the government hoped to coax a victory in the presidential
race for Mugabe or, at worst, the chance for him to fight a run-off
against Tsvangirai in three weeks' time.
But Mugabe must
know by now that he cannot win a run-off. The South Africans are
telling him that as I write. Make one last gracious speech now,
they say.
Meanwhile, Tsvangirai
has announced that he has won the Zimbabwean presidency, but by
a more slender margin than his party had first claimed—by
50.3 per cent against Mugabe's 43.8 per cent. But that leaves just
6.5 per cent for Mugabe's other challenger, his former finance minister
Simba Makoni—a ridiculously low figure. It seems that the
MDC either got its own early figures wrong, or that this too is
part of the South African effort to achieve an endgame with as much
face left for Mugabe as possible. The price of his departure, they
might be saying, is that there should be no triumphalism.
Either that,
or all parties in this historic but vexed election have been overplaying
their hands. I myself have no doubts that Tsvangirai won the presidential
election with a vote of well over 50 per cent and that his MDC captured
an absolute majority in parliament.
But Mugabe and
his people—whether they hold him captive or the other way
around—are never ones to be written off. Wily and ruthless,
they have lasted a very long distance at the expense of the vast
majority of their people. As a result of the country's soaring inflation,
I had to carry a small briefcase full of Zim$10m notes to make my
way around in the ten days I was in Zimbabwe. To put it in some
sort of bleak perspective, I also had to carry a suitcase of notes
in the aftermath of Idi Amin in Uganda. But South Africa and other
countries in the region need Zimbabwe to be prosperous again for
the sake of the economic future of all the countries in southern
Africa. Mugabe, the denunciator of western neocolonialism, has been
the one to slow the growth rates of the independent countries that
are his neighbours. Finally, even though they supported him in public,
no president in southern Africa will breathe anything but a sigh
of relief when the brilliant but vainglorious Robert Mugabe slouches
off into the ignominy of history.
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