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Has
Jonathan Moyo threatened a military coup in Zimbabwe
Clifford Chitupa
Mashiri
June 19, 2011
You don-t
have to be a rocket scientist to tell that Jonathan Moyo-s
latest mouthing is a cowardly veiled threat of a military coup in
Zimbabwe albeit he is neither a soldier nor an ex-guerrilla. After
reading his latest instalment, "Livingstone report now a matter
for historians-, New Zimbabwe, 19/06/11 it is clear that Jonathan
Moyo has crossed the line by blackmailing the people against negotiating
a roadmap for free and fair elections.
Jonathan Moyo
warns of "the looming danger which (he does not specify) . . . will
happen as sure as tomorrow is coming . . . that what is currently
a political process will become a national security matter. If that
happens, all hell will break loose." What does he mean by
that? Has Jonathan Moyo threatened a military coup in Zimbabwe?
Does he mean
resorting to "ruling through "GBO" (Government
By Operations) led by jittery security arms" as he once claimed,
saying they (JOC) "implemented an undeclared state of emergency
and roped in the Reserve Bank to pursue an unprecedented law and
order approach to monetary policy in order to criminalise Zimbabweans . . . to
inhuman and barbaric attacks in the name of restoring order reminiscent
of the Gukurahundi days." (Jonathan Moyo, "Why Mugabe
should go now", on October 29, 2006).
Unless the military
disowns his scare tactics, they risk being complicit to what amounts
to as a treasonous act of threatening a constitutional government.
By remaining silent, the JOC could become Moyo-s puppets by
default by virtue of his two major assets - a fluent command
of English and a deceitful skill at spinning.
Jonathan Moyo
deliberately misrepresents Zimbabwe-s tragic electoral history
and curiously apportions blame for the 5-week delay in announcing
election results to foreign countries. Has he forgotten what he
said in April 2008:
"If there
is one sobering thing that can be unequivocally said about why the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) has scandalously delayed the
announcement of the March
29 presidential election, it is simply that President Robert
Mugabe did not win the election and is now desperately trying to
steal the result through an unjustified recount because he does
not have any prospect of winning a run-off or a re-run," (Jonathan
Moyo, 'Mugabe can-t stomach defeat,- 13 April
2008). He did not stop there.
"Against
this background, ZEC-s perverse delay in announcing the result
of the presidential election leaves Zimbabweans and the international
community with only one gloomy conclusion: the defeated Mugabe and
his shocked hangers-on are using the delay to scheme up a dirty
game plan whose nefarious purpose is to reverse Tsvangirai-s
electoral victory with the collusion of ZEC at all cost and by any
means available. This is being done under a barrage of confused
and confusing Zanu PF talk around a recount, runoff or rerun when
the result has not been announced," Moyo said. Ironically,
that time Moyo did not accuse those he called "the UK, US
and EU imperialists" of regime change!
Contrary to
Jonathan Moyo-s claim that "Zimbabwe is capable of holding
free, fair and credible elections because it has the legal and institutional
bedrock upon which it has done so in the past," preliminary
findings of an empirical study which I am conducting for my DPhil
programme, the proposal of which is at the University
of Zimbabwe, show that the administration of Zimbabwe-s
elections has been militarized, politicized, flawed, and the elections
were fraught with electoral malpractices as evidenced by inter alia,
violence, murder, rape, scores of electoral petitions and the voters-
roll which is grossly defective.
My DPhil research
proposal now with POLAD, UZ is entitled "Towards a new theory
- a critical analysis of the militarization of Zimbabwe-s
elections (2000 - 2011) and the implications for good governance".
Observations
by one scholar revealed the bizarre case of Bulawayo, where the
number of spoilt ballots at a polling station was higher than those
of the winning candidate and that it took ZEC only two days to announce
the final results for the 27 June 2008 run-off, and within a few
hours the winning candidate had been crowned the President of Zimbabwe
although it took 5 weeks to announce March 2008 results!
Furthermore,
Professor R W Johnson, of the South African Institute of Race Relations
recently announced
that no fair referendum or election can be held in Zimbabwe on the
basis of the current voters- roll because it has about 2.5
million fictitious voters on it.
If anything
is now history, it is Jonathan Moyo-s parliamentary seat of
Tsholotsho which he should have resigned after he crossed the floor
to Zanu-PF because he is now short-changing the people of Tsholotsho
who deserve a fair representation in Parliament. In fact the Electoral
Law Act should be amended to clearly state that you lose your
seat on crossing the floor fullstop.
After all the
people of Tsholotsho did not know Jonathan Moyo before he was imposed
on them by Robert Mugabe, who, in his own words at the funeral of
the late Witness Mangwende at the National Heroes Acre in Harare
in May 2005, said the chiefs of Tsholotsho, where Moyo was standing
as an independent candidate after being barred from representing
Zanu PF, told him (Mugabe) that they did not know Moyo until he
was imposed on them by the president (Daily News, 02/05/05).
Of course, Jonathan
Moyo knows very well that he would lose immunity from prosecution
for alleged criminal offences should he resign as an MP. Moyo is
also aware of the fact that there should have been a by-election
in Tsholotsho by now, were it not for the GPA
despite lambasting it religiously whenever he wakes up on the wrong
side of the bed.
Two requests
worth making are, first for a National Day of Prayer so that Jonathan
Moyo-s unspecified threat of "the looming danger ...which
if it happens, all hell will break loose" (synonymous with
a coup?) does not materialise; secondly, that Zanu-PF should takeaway
his internet access so that he does not cause alarm and despondency
in the country through his articles.
However, it-s
unlikely they will succeed because Mugabe told a rally in Masvingo
in February 2005 that he and vice President Joyce Mujuru had spent
nearly one and half hours trying to convince Jonathan Moyo to step
down and allow the Politburo to have its way on the candidate for
Tsholotsho constituency, but he had refused because " ane musoro
wakaoma sedamba" (meaning he has a very hard head like that
of a wild fruit called Damba in Shona).
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