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Zimbabwe
opposition celebrates fifth anniversary
Peta
Thornycroft, Voice of America
September
13, 2004
http://www.voanews.com
It has been
five years since the launch of Zimbabwe's opposition party, the
Movement for Democratic Change. Party leader Morgan Tsvangirai says
the period has been marked by increased state repression.
When the Movement
for Democratic Change was formed in September 1999 it was the first
national, mass-based party to emerge since independence in 1980.
The ruling Zanu PF held more than 90-percent of the seats in parliament
before the last general election in 2000.
The MDC came
close to winning a majority.
MDC President
Morgan Tsvangirai said the trade unions and other social movements
out of which his party emerged were at first not prepared for ever
increasing repression.
"There was a
degree of euphoria and sometimes naive euphoria, about what was
going to take place. We did not expect the level of violence, we
did not expect that the state, and Mugabe in particular, would be
determined to hang on in spite of national and international opinion.
We were very confident that change was inevitable. But I think the
reality has shown that Mugabe was determined to defy all the odds
and hang in," he says.
Months after
the MDC was launched it defeated a ruling Zanu PF referendum and
two-weeks later Mr. Mugabe sent his supporters to take over white-owned
farms. Africa criticized the MDC for what it saw as an alliance
with whites who owned too much land.
"Africa is very
sensitive to white on black oppression naturally, we understand
that. But the perception created that white farmers, because again
connect to the land issue, supported the MDC, yes, it did hurt because
people could not distinguish this was not a land crisis but a crisis
of governance. They could not accept the reality that Zanu PF had
misruled, declared war against its own people, that there were serious
violations of human rights. They would rather believe it was white
farmers who were trying to reverse a genuine land-reform program
to resolve the historical dispute on land ownership, injustice on
land ownership, so yes, to some extent that perception created some
problems for MDC," he says.
Another criticism
of the MDC is it took its message first to the west, and only later
to Africa.
He says, "As
an opposition party, we were not accepted in official circles, so
we went to the people who would listen to our cause, would understand
where we were coming from and will genuinely take some interest.
Eventually we knew that we would have to return to the African continent,
which has succeeded. I have been (to) West africa, to southern Africa.
So the question is do you start off in hostile areas, or start off
in acceptable areas and then work from there backwards."
Last month the
cash strapped MDC, suspended participation in all elections until
Mr. Mugabe reforms laws in accordance with principles he endorsed
at a recent regional summit in Mauritius.
Mr. Tsvangirai
says that despite violence and continuing arrests of its leaders,
the MDC has matured from being a protest movement to a political
party He said the MDC would take part in the general election next
March if Mr. Mugabe complies with the regional norms and standards
for free and fair elections.
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