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Land
grab ploy out of Zanu-PF election manual
David Blair, The Telegraph
April 08, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/04/08/wzim208.xml
Robert Mugabe's response
to his apparent defeat in the first round of Zimbabwe's presidential
poll springs directly from the unofficial manual of electioneering
pioneered by Zanu-PF.
To guarantee his survival,
Mr Mugabe will now rob the whites, beat the blacks and rig the rules
in his favour. These methods saved him from oblivion after he lost
a referendum in February 2000. Everything indicates that Mr Mugabe
is now resorting to them once again.
Robbing the whites is
well under way. The white farmers have been reduced to a rump of
about 200, almost all of whom own only portions of their previous
land.
This last handful has
now been singled out, with organised invasions overwhelming at least
20 farms. The aim is to offer white-owned land as a reward for supporting
Mr Mugabe.
But all Zimbabweans know
that the land grab was largely completed five years ago. In 2000,
Zimbabwe had about 4,000 white farmers. By 2003, that total had
fallen to its present level.
So Mr Mugabe is now trying
a new propaganda line. He claims that unless he stays in power,
white farmers will return and reclaim their property, evicting any
blacks who were settled on their land.
"There have been
widespread reports of white former farmers flocking back into the
country," claimed The Herald, a state newspaper, yesterday.
Mr Mugabe has urged Zimbabweans
to "safeguard their land" and said: "The land is
ours, it must not be allowed to slip back into the hands of whites."
Reinforcing this battle-cry
are the veterans of the war against white rule, who led the first
farm invasions in 2000. They will be used to assault, torture, rape
or murder any blacks who oppose Mr Mugabe, in accordance with the
second chapter of Zanu-PF's manual.
As for rigging the vote,
the law requires that Mr Mugabe must face the election's second
round by April 19. He may decide that he needs more time.
Fortunately,
under the Presidential
Powers Act, passed as a "temporary measure" in 1986,
he can amend any law at will. He may employ this device to delay
a second round for weeks or months.
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