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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Where
to, Zimbabwe?
Patrick Bond, Pambazuka
April 03, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/47087
Zimbabwe's March
29 election surprised many, because although it seemed President
Robert Mugabe had the machinery in place to ensure a victory even
by stealth, as has happened before, the groundswell of opposition
was overwhelming. By late on April 3, we don't know how many votes
he won, either in reality or in the cooked books of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC), but certainly fewer than 50%.
What is known, at this
writing, is that a bare plurality of the 210 seats in the House
of Assembly were won by Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change: 99. This was two ahead of Mugabe's Zanu-PF, with Arthur
Mutambara's MDC faction getting 10 and the independent Jonathan
Moyo retaining his seat. (Three more seats will be fought for in
by-elections due to the deaths of MDC candidates.)
But these are official
statistics, and who knows what the actual votes were, once the multiple
systems of rigging are exposed, if ever they are?
As for the presidential
race - for which at this time no figures have been released
by the ZEC - Tsvangirai says that based on polling place reportbacks,
he received 1,171,079 votes, or about 49%, with Mugabe getting 44%
and Makoni the balance. (Mutambara told his supporters to vote for
Makoni.)
Senate and municipal
election results are also not being released as we write. In any
case, the official parliamentary results are so distorted that on
Thursday morning the state-owned Herald newspaper claimed, "Zanu-PF
had won 45,94 percent of the votes, MDC-Tsvangirai 42,88 percent,
the MDC [Mutambaraba] 8,39 percent and the minor parties and independent
candidates 2,79 percent." The Herald even claimed Zanu-PF
outpolled Tsvangirai's MDC in Matabeleland South.
Though Zanu-PF has definitely
lost control of parliament, such numbers justify Mugabe potentially
contesting a run-off, which would be held no more than 21 days after
March 29. Tsvangirai and former finance Minister Simba Makoni had
a pre-election pact to unite in such an event, and it is hard to
imagine that if the pact holds, Tsvangirai would not beat Mugabe
outright, one on one.
Makoni, who ran solo
for president with no machine behind him, never gained the open
public support of key military factions and of dissident Zanu-PF
politicians that his main handler, Ibbo Mandaza, had predicted.
Makoni's arrogance in
entering the race - probably drawing away roughly the same
votes from each main party - was again witnessed this morning.
His advisor, former Mugabe spokersperson Godfrey Chanetsa, now insists
that in a new government in alliance with Tsvangirai, Makoni would
not "play second fiddle. He came to lead."
As reporter Fiona Forde
put it, "frantic behind-the-scenes negotiations were laying
the groundwork for a government of national unity that would include
not only the opposition MDC but also Zanu-PF with Makoni taking
on a senior role with extended executive powers."
Here's Chanetsa's strange
rationale: "Eight percent is an illusion. Many people were
afraid to vote for Simba, afraid of letting Zanu in the back door
and losing their chance of getting rid of Robert. But if they got
rid of Robert, do you still think they would see Morgan as the right
man for the job?"
Meanwhile, an ominous
dance began between Tsvangirai and the forces of imperialism. According
to a Reuters report today, the MDC would gain access to US$2 billion
per year in 'aid and development' - which normally is top-heavy
with foreign debt and chock-full of conditions. Amongst these, most
likely, are dramatic cuts to the civil services, so that the Zimbabwe
central bank stops printing so much money, fuelling inflation. But
the downside is the potential deepening of the country's economic
crisis in the short term, as effective demand falls while more luxury
goods become available thanks to foreign exchange inflows.
The key players are the
International Monetary Fund, World Bank, European Union and the
United Nations. No doubt Bush's White House is also involved in
negotiations, which, if Tsvangirai persuades Mugabe to depart, may
even reach fruition next week at the IMF/Bank spring meetings in
Washington.
Given that Tsvangirai
has chosen advisors from the International Republican Institute
and Cato Institute, such a process was anticipated. It simply means
that the left-leaning civil society forces that backed Tsvangirai
have a huge regroupment challenge. If after an April 21 victory,
many progressive Zimbabwean organisations lose cadres into an expanded
state, this may recall the liquidation of South Africa's Mass Democratic
Movement into the African National Congress government.
At least in Kenya, reports
from Tuesday's street battles between hundreds of protesters and
police show that civil society will not necessarily accept a 'supersized
state' as a gimmick to seduce contesting parties into a government
of national unity. "No more than 24!" was the activists'
demand for a slim state so that more social spending can be spent
on ordinary people, not the bloated ministers' Mercedes.
In the same critical
spirit, Kenya's National Civil society Congress and Kenyans for
Peace with Truth and Justice offered wisdom and solidarity in a
statement today. Amongst their concerns, were "That SADC should
review their statement that concluded that elections were free and
fair while closing their ears to the significance of the undemocratic
practices of the Zanu-PF regime."
Between Kenya's tragic
election last December and Zimbabwe's uplifting experience last
Saturday, lessons should be taught and retaught about the dangers
of elite transition between a voracious, corrupt, violent and divisive
set of rulers, and an incoming crew who might not withstand the
blandishments of local power-sharing and global economic seduction.
*Professor
Patrick Bond is the Director of the Durban based Centre for Civil
Society.
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