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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Absence
of street fury in Zimbabwe puzzles analysts
Paul Salopek, Chicago Tribune
May 01, 2008
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-zimbabwe-election_thursmay01,0,90096.story
Suspiciously delayed
poll results, army trucks fanning out through villages, police ransacking
opposition party offices, and reports of torched huts and broken-limbed
civilians—such has been the ugly face of democracy for nearly
a decade in Zimbabwe, and by now most political experts have given
up asking whether millions of Zimbabweans will ever reach a violent
breaking point.
Indeed, even as fresh
reports of government brutality seep out of Zimbabwe in the wake
of the still-unresolved March presidential election, there are virtually
no reports of unrest on the streets.
A call for a mass protest
two weeks ago by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
which claims it won the vote, fizzled as usual. Hungry citizens
queued obediently for bread in the capital, Harare, last week even
as cops rounded up hundreds of opposition activists.
The lone report of a
violent backlash—an alleged attack by opposition members on
a rural army barracks Tuesday—remains unconfirmed. Human-rights
activists suspect it may have been planted by the regime of strongman
Robert Mugabe to justify further arrests.
This deep well of stoicism
— or, as some critics sneer, passivity — in Zimbabwe's
victimized population has for years been a source of puzzlement
to many Africa analysts, humanitarian workers and foreign journalists,
who contrast Zimbabweans' seemingly inexhaustible acceptance of
suffering with deadly explosions of electoral fury elsewhere in
Africa, most recently in Kenya.
The
'greatest mystery'
"This is
the single greatest mystery of Zimbabwe," marveled a Western
diplomat in Harare who spoke on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the issue. "In most other countries there
would've been riots and violence years ago. But not here. These
people are just too nice."
The latest test of Zimbabweans'
restraint came on Wednesday, when the United Nations Security Council
announced that it would not dispatch a special envoy to Zimbabwe
to help resolve the election standoff. South Africa and China opposed
the measure.
Meanwhile, the humanitarian
group Human Rights Watch reported that Mugabe's security forces
were intensifying violent attacks on opposition voters in remote
areas. In Manicaland province, the Zimbabwean army was equipping
Mugabe-allied "war veterans" with trucks and rifles, the
group said.
At least 20 people have
been killed nationwide since the election, the opposition says.
Mugabe launched similar
attacks in 2000 against white farmers and their black workers as
part of the government's disastrous land-reform policy. Since then,
there have been two more dubious elections, reports of "rape
camps" for opposition activists and an economic meltdown that
has seen 150,000 percent inflation—the highest in the world—80
percent unemployment, near-starvation and such critical fuel shortages
that ox wagons have replaced ambulances in some areas.
Through it all, hapless
Zimbabweans—who favor sunny first names like Goodwill, Anyhow,
Primrose and Everjoy—have managed to maintain a peaceful and
law-abiding disposition. They are the Canadians of Africa.
Theories for this abound:
Some point to the lack of standing armies or a warrior caste in
Zimbabwe's majority Shona culture. Others cite the weakening effects
of malnutrition and a huge HIV/AIDS epidemic on the population,
whose average life expectancy has eroded to 39. Still others note
that millions of frustrated young people, the natural base for an
armed opposition, have voted with their feet. A quarter to a third
of Zimbabwe's 12 million people have fled political intimidation
and economic ruin in their country to seek work in South Africa,
Botswana or other neighboring states.
Death
by a thousand cuts
Another explanation
is death by a thousand cuts. After eight years of watching their
world fall apart in slow motion, Zimbabweans are deeply demoralized.
An oft-repeated word in their conversations is a toneless "hopefully."
"We're also too
proper—more English than the English," said Foster Dongozi,
secretary general of the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists, naming Zimbabwe's
former colonial overlord. "Instead of picking up weapons, we
go to court."
Dongozi wasn't kidding.
"Mugabe has made
a specialty of sham legality, lots of useless laws, phony rules
that mean nothing," he said. "He knows how far to push
us. He knows how to distract us with a veneer of normalcy. He knows
how to beat us way down, but not so far as to embarrass his African
neighbors."
As an example of calibrated
repression, Dongozi told how two Zimbabwean journalists were arrested
after the elections on spurious charges of arson; an electrical
fire had charred a bus in Harare that day. When that charge didn't
stick, police switched the crime to attempted murder, and finally
settled on public mischief. The reporters remain in jail.
Harare was hosting
an arts festival this week just as pro-government militants armed
with guns and machetes were reported to be fanning out to torch
the distant homes and granaries of villagers.
"Right
now Mugabe may be desperately trying to provoke us into a low-grade
civil war," said David Coltart, an opposition senator from
the western Zimbabwe city of Bulawayo.
"We won't take the
bait. That's where our people's tradition of rejecting violence
pays off," Coltart said. "It's taken us longer to go the
Martin Luther King route, but I think we're close to winning."
Others weren't so sure.
Reuters reported Wednesday
that Zimbabwe election officials will soon announce that opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai had indeed won the election—but without
the majority needed to assume power. A runoff would need to be called,
and Mugabe could spool out that process for months.
"This is
a regime that won't ever give up power easily," said Elinor
Sisulu, a Zimbabwean human-rights organizer who lives in South Africa.
"It's going to require extraordinary things from us to get
it out."
psalopek@tribune.com
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