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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe's
'Democracy'
Morgan Tsvangirai, Washington Post
April 24, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/23/AR2008042302982.html
Words are deadly in today's
Zimbabwe. "Winner," "recount," "treason"
and "democracy" carry barbs and built-in explosives. Ordinary
Zimbabweans are suffering at the hands of an authoritarian regime
with no sense of proportion or timing, a dictatorship with no scruples.
First, we are being led
to believe that my party, the Movement for Democratic Change, was
not the winner of the March 29 election. The world is expected to
believe that the results are not only inconclusive but also somehow
wrong. According to Robert Mugabe's regime, "winner" means
that the MDC has garnered votes to which it has no right and that
his party lost out only through unfair means.
This ignores reality.
If any party has been denied votes by foul means, it is the MDC.
But in today's Zimbabwe, "recount" means "stalling
for more time."
Intimidation and stuffing
of ballot boxes are common practices of Mugabe's government. In
fact, the regime has no qualms about demanding a recount when the
results have still not been fully released, raising questions as
to just what are the grounds for a recount.
In the tense aftermath
of the election, those who acted upon their convictions and voted
their consciences, in hopes of establishing a true democracy, have
been branded as threats to the state. Panicked government officials
are bullying voters thought to have cast ballots for my party. Already,
casualty numbers are rising.
The accusation of treason
has also been hurled at me. "Treason" means I am unable
to return home for fear of my life. But while I am used to these
sorts of abuses from Mugabe, we cannot allow the truth to be concealed.
Mugabe has attempted
to sell the belief that this election was democratic and that Zimbabwe
is a functional democracy.
Let us take a closer
look at democracy, Mugabe-style: His is a "democracy"
of votes obtained through violence and intimidation. This is a "democracy"
in which freedom is a faded banner, waved occasionally over the
heads of a battered people, and not the central foundation of a
free nation. This is a "democracy" built on human rights
abuses, corruption, denial, widespread injustice and the deaths
of innocents.
Mugabe's "democracy"
is a hollowed-out shell, and in his Zimbabwe, the term "democracy"
means "denial of truth."
The world must know:
There is an all-out crisis in Zimbabwe. Unfortunately, South African
President Thabo Mbeki has sought to deny this truth, despite all
evidence to the contrary. Given his status as leader of the region's
major power, Mbeki's bizarre analysis has underpinned inaction not
only in Africa but also elsewhere within the international community.
Thankfully, wiser heads
in South Africa's ruling party and elsewhere have sought to marginalize
Mbeki's disinformation. Those of us struggling for true democracy
in Zimbabwe hope that quiet diplomacy is being replaced by a more
active approach.
As that diplomatic process
generates further discussion and assessment, we who support democracy
in Zimbabwe can only hope that the Mugabe regime's actions are soon
shown for what they are: attacks on democracy itself.
*Morgan
Tsvangirai is leader of the Movement for Democratic Change in Zimbabwe.
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