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Democracy
is soap for the stain of tyranny
Gwynne Dyer, New Zealand Herald
April 08, 2008
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10502565
It has been a vivid demonstration
of how power really works. A week ago, Robert Mugabe was still the
undisputed ruler of Zimbabwe.
He was 84, and he had
reduced the country to ruin: four out of five adults are unemployed,
inflation is running (officially) at over 100,000 per cent, and
one-third of the population has fled abroad in search of work, mostly
to South Africa. Yet nobody in his own party, Zanu-PF, dared to
question his rule, the police and the Army remained loyal, and ordinary
people lived in quiet desperation.
The silent submission
of the population owed a good deal to the brutality of the police,
but what can explain the loyalty of his own colleagues in the party
and the Army? After all, Zimbabwe is theirs, too, and nobody likes
to see their homeland dragged in the dirt.
Moreover, it was all
Mugabe's fault, brought about by policies that he freely chose to
pursue. He is not 10 feet tall and he has no magical powers. Why
did they obey him?
They obeyed him because
he has been in power for 28 years, longer than the great majority
of Zimbabweans have been alive. (The average Zimbabwean woman is
dead at 34, the lowest life expectancy in the world. Men make it
to 37.) They obeyed him because he was the hero of the independence
struggle and an icon of African liberation.
Most of all, they obeyed
him because his rule was apparently the only thing that kept them
out of the desperate poverty in which most Zimbabweans live. Powerful
people who defied him were rarely killed, but they were cut off
from the flow of wealth and had a very hard time of it. So the regime
cruised on almost unaffected by the ruin of the country, and Mugabe
even felt secure enough to allow more or less free elections on
March
29.
He had been under heavy
pressure by the African Union to clean up his act. The farther away
potential investors are, the harder they find it to tell the difference
between one African country and another, and Zimbabwe's bad reputation
was hurting the whole region.
So Mugabe made what seemed
to be a harmless concession. Typically, in Zimbabwean elections,
the cities vote against Mugabe, but the countryside, where 75 per
cent of the people live, votes for him. At least, it seems to. Rural
people are more easily intimidated, opposition observers can easily
be chased away from isolated rural polling stations, and things
can happen to the ballot boxes on the way to Harare to be counted.
Mugabe was so confident,
he didn't even send out Zanu-PF's storm troopers, the so-called
"war veterans" (most of whom were not born during the
liberation war), to frighten people into voting the right way.
But he had made one crucial
miscalculation: in response to pressure from the African Union,
he agreed to let the vote be counted locally, with the results posted
up outside each polling station.
So the main opposition
party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), sent members to
photograph the results at more than 8000 polling stations, and it
suddenly got very hard to manipulate the returns at a central location.
And it turned out - maybe it had been true at every previous election,
too - that around half the population had not voted for Zanu-PF.
Suddenly, in a huge shift,
the "old man" is not the object of fear and adulation
any more.
In the eyes of some senior
party people and their military and police colleagues, Mugabe has
become a bargaining counter.
If the jig is really
up, maybe they could trade Mugabe and power for a peaceful retirement
with no awkward questions about where their wealth came from. Of
course, Mugabe would also have to be allowed an honourable retirement
himself - but as one of the last heroes of Africa's independence
generation, he was guaranteed that anyway.
Or maybe they should
declare martial law, annul the election and push Mugabe aside -
or leave him out front as a figurehead and flak-catcher. He must
be very disconcerted, after 28 years of absolute power, to discover
that it was just a confidence trick all along.
But the game is not over
yet. While both those options remain open, the party elders and
the security forces have opted for the moment to play more or less
by the rules: a run-off election in two weeks between Mugabe and
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
That gives them time
to deploy the bully-boys, re-intimidate the rural population, and
pull off a second-round victory for Mugabe. Or, if that strategy
doesn't look like it's going to work (for once people have lost
their fear, it's much harder to re-instil it), then they still have
time to exercise Option A or Option B.
So what does this tell
us about power? That the more absolute and illegitimate it is, the
easier it is for it to dissolve overnight. And that democracy is
a good solvent.
* Gwynne
Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are
published in 45 countries.
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