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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
MDC pull out from presidential run-off election - Index of articles
Yes,
Tsvangirai was right to pull out
Gugulethu Moyo, Independent (UK)
June 23, 2008
View article
on the Independent (UK) website
Morgan Tsvangirai's
decision to pull
out of the presidential run-off comes as no surprise.
At least 86 of his supporters
have been killed and thousands have been beaten, driven from their
homes or both. When more than a thousand of his polling agents were
detained days before the election and armed Zanu-PF gangsters occupied
and blocked access to the venue of his final rally yesterday, he
decided to end the charade.
Mr Tsvangirai's impulse,
which is to prevent further pointless bloodshed, especially of frontline
electoral staff such as polling agents is understandable. After
all, President Robert Mugabe has said he will not cede power to
the MDC, even if by some miracle, the result shows that he has lost.
There is little evidence
that Mr Mugabe's campaign to obliterate the MDC will end just because
there is no election. Instead, Mr Mugabe is likely to seize the
opportunity handed to him to kick out foreign election observers,
who for the moment are the witnesses of the world on Mr Mugabe's
crimes. When they leave, Mr Tsvangirai and his supporters will be
in even greater danger.
Still, the problem of
the dangerous regime in Harare is now for world leaders to solve,
not for Mr Tsvangirai. For far too long, defenders of the ineffectual
policies of Mr Mugabe's neighbours have argued they have been walking
a fine line, trying to cajole the President, who only cares about
staying in power, into cooperating. That hasn't worked, and more
lives are lost every day. They now have an obligation to move swiftly
and finally resolve the problem. To save lives.
For starters, the African
Union should immediately deploy credible human rights monitors to
Zimbabwe. These monitors should not be limited to the cities - they
should also venture into rural areas, where murders, torture and
rape are most prevalent.
In his cynical, bloody
bid to cling on to power, Mr Mugabe, has bet on the unwillingness
of regional and international institutions to take effective measures
to stop his reign of terror. It is now time for world leaders to
prove him wrong.
*The author
is a Zimbabwean lawyer and member of the International Bar Association.
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