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Zimbabwe
referendum - Mugabe and Tsvangirai cosy up
Denford
Magora
March 10, 2013
http://denfordmagora.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/zimbabwe-referendum-mugabe-and.html
The referendum
on the Zimbabwe Constitution, slated for the end of this week
has given birth to the spectacle of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
campaigning on the same platform as President Robert Mugabe.
Both men are
urging their supporters to vote yes, even as Tsvangirai now screams
blue murder and insists that the elections that will follow in July
will not be free and fair. There is intimidation, apparently, and
even killings and deaths.
So why the embrace,
seems to be the question most posted to me on this page in my absence.
Simple: Tsvangirai
has the constitution that he wants, even though he would like more
power in the hands of the president.
Mugabe simply
does not care. He is sick and tired of what he calls "this
multi-headed monster" - the Unity Government. He is impatient
for the elections to come, sure he will wallop the MDC. He made
this clear in an address to chiefs recently.
The Constitution
is flawed, he said. but Zanu-PF supporters must vote yes. Whoever
wins the elections, Mugabe said, can then change the constitution
to their taste.
So the urging
of supporters to vote Yes is simply to get the whole thing out of
the way. The referendum is of no significance to Mugabe, clearly.
The referendum will not determine who rules the country. The elections
will.
So, throw Morgan
a bone.
Done.
Then use the
referendum as essentially the beginning of the Zanu-PF General Election
campaign. Tsvangirai will get his yes, and that will be the end
of it.
The presidency
and running of the country is where the real game is and Tsvangirai
is simply playing into those hands brilliantly. Only recently did
he realize that, while distracted by his excitement at the bone
thrown him, Zanu-PF was already busy locking up votes.
Emboldened also
by the fact that two research results coming from conservative groups
in London and Washington both say Mugabe is more popular than Tsvangirai
in Zimbabwe, the veteran Zim leader has now decided to also have
a little fun with the Europeans.
A couple of
weeks after giving the nod to the constitution, Mugabe told members
of the Zanu-PF politburo that he had also agreed to the yes vote
to show the world that Europe was not sincere when it spoke of lifting
sanctions after the referendum. He fully expects that these will
remain, as will ZIDERA in the United States.
And he will
take that into the election, now.
One of the things
most underestimated by Mugabe's opponents in the west is that, in
any country anywhere on earth, people tend to naturally revolt against
what they see as an imposition from outsiders.
It has helped
Mugabe a bit so far, this sentiment.
So, by taking
the insincerity of the EU into the election, he will simply be playing
up that nationalistic sentiment, telling all and sundry that the
Europeans will only lift sanctions when an MDC government is in
power.
They are, in
other words, holding Zimbabwe and Zimbabweans to ransom because
of their love for an MDC-T government.
Of course, propagandists
will tell you about sanctions being targeted, and this is to be
expected. But is working against the MDC-T with the general population.
Whether we like it or not, the issue of sanctions touching every
aspect of the ordinary Zimbabwean has been effectively drummed in
by Zanu-PF. The MDC has failed to capitalise or even change strategy
on this issue.
Sticking to
the same script even as evidence points to its lack of impact, they
are intent on preaching only to their congregation and Mugabe is
aware of this. He will milk the sanctions thing and, now that we
have a much more improved economic situation, there will not be
an element of "throw the bastards out" at the next election,
which benefited Tsvangirai and the MDC-T during hyperinflation because
the suffering had reached such proportions that people simply wanted
it to end, no matter what that took.
This is no longer
the case and Mugabe is counting on the MDC-T continuing to behave
as though we are in hyperinflation, forgetting that the dollarised
regime has now shifted the goalposts closer to Zanu-PF than MDC-T.
Still, this
referendum is nothing but an inconvenience that Mugabe wants out
of the way so that he can wallop the MDC-T at the next elections.
This is why Mugabe and Zanu-PF are not spending any money on the
Yes, campaign, although Yes is also their position. They are letting
Tsvangirai spend millions campaigning for a Yes vote, keeping their
US$250 million war-chest to fight the elections,
to be held probably in July.
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