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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Talk
of Mugabe end is premature
Blessing-Miles Tendi, Pambazuka News
April 08, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/47178
Blessing-Miles Tendi
argues that it is too early to rule out a Mugabe led Zimbabwe -
he will find ways to remain in power.
I have been following
Zimbabwe's 2008 elections closely. My emotions have mutated with
alacrity, checking news sites more often than I should, and receiving
calls and messages from family and political contacts in Zimbabwe.
Since last week, I have gone from 'Robert Mugabe and ZANU PF will
win' to 'it will be a landslide victory for the opposition' to 'Mugabe
has already fled the country fearing retribution' to 'the army has
ordered the electoral commission to declare Mugabe the winner' and
now, my present mood and thinking is that a lot of people are going
to be disappointed by the eventual outcome of the presidential poll
because we are headed for a do or die run-off between Mugabe and
Morgan Tsvangirai.
The two things that stand
out about Mugabe's political pattern is his consistency, and that
he is too wily and resolute in power to be swept away in a pseudo
democratic election. Zimbabwe is better off without him at the helm
but we must temper our emotions and stop our imagination from running
wild. Mugabe has been in difficult situations before and wriggled
out of them amazingly. 'Jesus rose from the dead once but I have
come back from the dead several times', he once boasted. The probability
is high that Mugabe can come back from the dead once again. I would
not bet against it. This is my position now, after what has been
a rollercoster week of miraculous flip-flopping on my part.
Sovereignty is a vehicle
towards the good life for the ZANU PF political elite. The font
of sovereignty is the powerful executive presidency through which
ZANU PF has privatised the institution of the state as a means to
authoritarian rule and personal aggrandisement: 'the desire to retain
sovereignty and not to surrender it or even share it is a powerful
motive perpetuating the ex-colonial status quo in Sub Saharan Africa.
Sovereignty gives a relatively small number of people control of
state positions which confer enormous palpable advantages and privileges.
Ruling elites literally live off sovereignty and most live very
well indeed - as long as they live. They fight to keep it and others
fight to take it away from them'.
When Mugabe and ZANU
PF play up sovereignty it is in order to protect their hold on power
and its benefits. Their uses of sovereignty are less about protecting
the country and its inhabitants' sovereignty but more about protecting
the 'enormous palpable advantages and privileges' sovereignty affords
them. In Zimbabwe it is not the governed who are sovereign -
it is ZANU PF that is sovereign. ZANU PF elites live off sovereignty.
Thus, sovereignty is one of the themes commanding broad consensus
in ZANU PF and the party will strive - at all costs - to keep
its hold on sovereignty by retaining the presidency in the looming
run off.
A run off between Mugabe
and Morgan Tsvangirai may suit Mugabe better than facing Simba Makoni
in a runoff because if there is anything many in ZANU PF and Zimbabwe's
top security officials are united on, it is that Tsvangirai must
not rule. Those comprising the status quo not only stand to lose
their sovereignty but also fear prosecution for crimes committed
in office if Tsvangirai prevails.
ZANU PF was divided in
this election but expect it to put its differences aside and to
rally behind Mugabe forcefully in a run off with Tsvangirai. Mugabe
risked damaging defections if he had faced Makoni in a run off.
A Mugabe-Makoni run off would have presented Makoni's secret and
powerful backers in ZANU PF, such as Solomon Mujuru, with the opportune
moment to abandon Mugabe in favour of Makoni. Mugabe will also find
it easier to marshal ZANU PF's rank and file to campaign for him
against Tsvangirai as opposed to Makoni who has many sympathisers
in the ruling party. Indeed some will not need to be marshaled at
all for retaining the presidency means guaranteeing their life of
privilege.
ZANU PF will leave no
stone unturned in a Mugabe-Tsvangirai face off. ZANU PF was complacent
in the rural areas and some of its rural party structures were not
as formidable as they normally are. It underestimated the extent
to which Tsvangirai would make significant in roads into its rural
strongholds. The free political space Tsvangirai enjoyed in the
rural areas during this campaign will be gone in the run off. A
run off in 3 weeks, or 90 days as has been suggested, also allows
ZANU PF some time to tinker its rigging machinery. The war veterans
have started making threats. There is a developing discourse proclaiming
the return of white farmers and how the land revolution can only
be defended by re-electing Mugabe. The military looks set to be
more involved than ever before in guaranteeing Mugabe's re-election.
We are about to be blitzed with everything ZANU PF has left.
* Blessing-Miles
Tendi is a researcher at Oxford University.
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