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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
The
crisis in Zimbabwe and prospects for resolution
Michelle D. Gavin, Christian Science Monitor
July 15, 2008
http://www.cfr.org/content/publications/attachments/Zim%20testimony%20FINAL.pdf
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I am grateful
to Chairman Feingold and Senator Isakson for this opportunity to
testify before the Subcommittee on African Affairs, and I thank
the Subcommittee for its consistent and thoughtful efforts on the
issue of Zimbabwe.
The current state of
play with regard to Zimbabwe is characterized by a desperate internal
situation, a divided and ineffective set of international responses,
and a troubling lack of clarity and consensus regarding the most
promising way forward. The United States has limited options, but
there are steps that can and should be taken to improve the prospects
for a peaceful and swift resolution to the crisis.
A manmade
disaster
This Subcommittee is more than familiar with Zimbabwe-s recent
history. By the late 1990s, economic mismanagement, official corruption,
and the dominance of the ruling ZANU-PF party had stoked significant
frustration within the country. A referendum on constitutional change
that would have strengthened President Mugabe considerably catalyzed
the forces opposed to the status quo and led to the emergence of
a new opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
with roots in the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions. When the electorate rejected the government
backed draft constitution in February 2000, the ruling party embarked
on an increasingly costly campaign to shore up its power and guarantee
its continued dominance.
Over the course
of parliamentary elections in 2000 and 2005 and presidential elections
in 2002, ZANU-PF continued a campaign of intimidation aimed at the
MDC, its supporters, independent journalists, civil society activists,
and ordinary Zimbabweans (especially the 700,000 Zimbabweans displaced
in 2005-s Operation
Murambatsvina). The ruling party employed youth militia forces
and "war veterans" in addition to using the regular
security services to further its agenda. Senior security officers
came to have a decisive role in all government decisions. Over time,
the MDC was weakened to the point of splitting in 2005, with one
faction led by Morgan Tsvangirai and another by Arthur Mutambara.
Meanwhile, as the economy
went into freefall, lucrative opportunities were provided to ZANU-PF
elites to ensure their continued loyalty.
The most recent round
of elections demonstrated just how deep dissatisfaction with the
ruling party has become within Zimbabwe - and just how far
the Mugabe regime is willing to go to cling to power. The extraordinary
nature of the MDC-s victories in the March 29, 2008, parliamentary
and presidential elections can only be understood when combined
with a full appreciation for just how unfair he pre-election conditions
were in the run-up to the balloting. Voting day itself was peaceful,
but the campaigning period featured incidents of state harassment
of opposition candidates, an extraordinarily strong state media
bias in favor of the ruling party, manipulation of subsidized food
to favor ZANU-PF, and widely publicized statements from senior security
officials indicating that they would not recognize any victor but
President Mugabe. Even with the deck stacked steeply against them,
the official tallies, which the ZANU-PF-dominated electoral
commission took five weeks to announce, revealed that opposition
candidates fared extremely well with voters, winning a narrow majority
in the House of Assembly and a plurality of the votes for President,
though not enough to avoid the need for a runoff.
In the weeks
before the runoff election, pre-election conditions went from problematic
to terrifying. The Government of Zimbabwe banned many humanitarian
and development NGOs from operating in the country and launched
a vicious and far-reaching campaign of brutality and violence targeting
MDC leaders and supporters as well as everyday citizens. Mugabe
and members of his inner circle also made it clear that they would
not respect any election result other than victory. In response,
Tsvangirai withdrew
from the June 27 sham exercise, which Mugabe won in a meaningless
landslide.
Zimbabwe today
is a country held hostage by an illegitimate government. As the
international community fails to come to consensus on a strategy
for resolving the crisis, civilians suffer in the midst of a man-made
economic catastrophe characterized by stratospheric hyperinflation,
massive unemployment, and food shortages so severe that the World
Food Program anticipates that some five million Zimbabweans will
be in need of food aid by September. This humanitarian crisis is
all the more alarming in light of the Government of Zimbabwe-s
refusal to allow NGOs full access to populations in need.
On top of this
grim outlook, brutal political repression continues in Zimbabwe,
as hardliners in ZANU-PF seek to continue punishing Zimbabweans
for supporting democratic change and to decimate the organizational
capacity of the opposition party and of independent civil society
organizations. The ruling party continues to keep the
press on a tight leash and takes deliberate steps isolate and misinform
the Zimbabwean people.
The
international response
The international community-s response to these developments
has been disjointed for years, and unfortunately it remains incoherent
today. Over the course of the past eight years, the United States,
EU, Australia and others condemned the repression in Zimbabwe and
in many cases pursued targeted sanctions policies while still trying
to provide humanitarian support to the population. In 2004, Zimbabwe
withdrew from the Commonwealth rather than face expulsion. But many
African states have long been reluctant to condemn Mugabe, and South
African President Thabo Mbeki-s efforts to mediate between
the MDC and ZANU-PF on behalf of the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) have produced very little in the way of results.
Mugabe has exploited these different reactions, and often characterizes
the crisis in Zimbabwe as a new liberation struggle against neocolonial
Western powers.
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