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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Counting
votes - and bodies
The Guardian (UK)
May 31, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/may/31/zimbabwe?gusrc=rss&feed=worldnews
Morgan Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's
opposition leader, claimed yesterday that Robert Mugabe's party
no longer ruled the country. This is technically true. The Movement
for Democratic Change won a majority of seats in parliament after
the first round of elections on March 29. But a bitter, and probably
bloody, month of campaigning lies ahead before Mr Tsvangirai can
really put his claim to the test in the presidential runoff.
Mr Tsvangirai called
for "peaceful members" of Zanu-PF to participate in talks
over a national unity government. The offer was instantly dismissed
by the justice minister, Patrick Chinamasa, who likened the MDC's
political platform to "a declaration of war". In the meantime,
a real war is being waged on MDC supporters. Bands of soldiers,
war veterans and Zanu-PF activists have been terrorising outlying
rural areas which voted against the party and Mr Mugabe in the first
round. They have razed villages and beaten, tortured, abducted and
murdered MDC activists. The body of one was found this week with
his eyes gouged and his tongue cut out. At least 50 people have
been killed, 1,600 treated in hospital and 50,000 forced from their
homes.
This campaign is targeted
against specific areas and people: those most at risk are second-
and third-tier MDC activists, people with no international profile
living in areas cut off from the global information village. It
is premeditated violence, designed to instil the fear of God into
the rural heartlands of the country which deserted Mr Mugabe in
the first round. By the time the runoff is held on June 27 the roving
bands of killers will have melted into the night, but the memory
of them will linger on - or at least that is the intention.
These are tried and tested
tactics of intimidation. And they have worked before in taming unruly
provinces. A brigade of soldiers trained by the North Koreans put
down a rebellion in Matabeleland at the cost of 20,000 lives between
1982 and 1985. It was called the gukurahundi (the rain which washes
away the chaff before the spring rains). A similar, though lesser,
downfall is washing away opposition support in three provinces of
Mashonaland in northern Zimbabwe. The question that must be preying
on Mr Mugabe's mind is: will it work again?
He can not be sure. Here
the narrative switches from atrocities that should be referred to
an international court, to a parallel world of cold, political calculation.
Mr Mugabe needs to find 200,000 votes. He has already dealt with
50,000 of them, by forcing MDC supporters from the villages where
they can cast their votes, and he is guessing that the reign of
terror in the north will account for the rest. The MDC is also doing
its sums. Mr Tsvangirai won the first round by a six-point margin
or 160,000 votes. Add to that the vote gained by Simba Makoni, the
Zanu-PF renegade supported by one faction of the MDC, and a further
170,000 votes will be gained. More votes can be culled, the MDC
claim, from higher turnout, and voters returning home from abroad.
But their real hope is that the campaign of violence will backfire
against its perpetrators, and will harden the resolve to get rid
of a dictator in the dying days of his regime.
This may be just another
example of misplaced optimism. No one will know until the ballot
takes place. In the meantime, the fate of thousands of Zimbabweans
lies in the hands of the Southern African Development Community,
who have this week been deciding how many observers to send. There
are 9,000 polling stations to monitor, theoretically entailing a
force of 18,000 observers. This is unlikely, as the SADC only mustered
200 people for the first round. But if the SADC is going to send
in a substantial force, it needs to be dispatched now. Wait any
longer and calm will have returned to Mashonaland. But it will be
the peace of the grave.
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