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Zimbabwe's
vanquished opposition marks 8th anniversary
Peta
Thornycroft, Voice of America (VOA)
September 13, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-09-13-voa35.cfm
Zimbabwe's opposition,
the Movement for Democratic Change, was formed eight years ago this
week. When it was only six months old, it delivered President Robert
Mugabe's first political defeat. Now it is a shadow of itself, split
into two factions. As Peta Thornycroft reports for the VOA, the
MDC has little chance of winning next year's crucial national elections
even if there is electoral reform and a less repressive political
climate.
The Movement for Democratic
Change was established in 1999. Just six months after the party
came into being, it was able to mobilize the people of Zimbabwe
to vote against a new constitution in a national referendum.
It was a stinging
blow for the aging Zimbabwean leader, dealt by a fledgling party
under the leadership of the charismatic former secretary general
of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, Morgan Tsvangirai.
The party drew support
across racial and tribal lines, reflecting growing dissatisfaction
with Mr. Mugabe's rule and concern over an economy that had begun
to shrink.
The victory in the referendum
sparked a fresh mood of optimism in Zimbabwe. People in urban areas
responded to Tsvangirai and they became the party's stronghold.
Just months later, in
June 2000, and despite massive repression and accusations that the
MDC was foreign-funded and a stooge of British imperialism, the
party came within four seats of beating the ruling Zanu-PF in parliamentary
elections.
Mr. Mugabe had already
launched his chaotic land redistribution program, taking farms away
from commercial farmers. The economy, dependent on agricultural
exports mostly produced by the evicted farmers, went into rapid
decline.
Tough new security and
media laws were put in place. Ahead of presidential elections in
2002, Tsvangirai was charged with treason on a trumped-up charge
of plotting to assassinate President Mugabe.
The trial drained the
MDC's financial resources and put Tsvangirai at a disadvantage when
he stood as the opposition candidate.
Tens of thousands were
unable to vote, especially in Tsvangirai's stronghold, Harare. The
party presented evidence during a subsequent court challenge which
they said demonstrated that Zanu-PF cheated in order to give President
Mugabe a 15-percent victory at the polls.
Following the election,
more MDC legislators and supporters were detained, beaten and some
were killed. The pro-MDC newspaper, The Daily News, was bombed and
then closed down.
Squabbles emerged within
the MDC, aggravated by tensions between its Shona and Ndebele leaders.
In the March 2005 general
election, the MDC lost more than a third of the legislative seats
it had won five years earlier.
The party finally split
over the issue of whether to boycott senate elections later that
year.
The split caused dismay
and confusion among its supporters and left the MDC divided along
tribal lines. There was some violence between the two factions.
The faction which chose
to fight the senate elections asked academic Arthur Mutambara to
lead it. He had been the first person from Mr. Mugabe's Shona tribe,
as a student leader years earlier, to lead protests against the
ruling ZANU-PF.
At present, both MDC
factions have equal numbers of legislators in parliament, but most
political observers say Tsvangirai has more supporters than Mutambara,
particularly in densely populated Harare.
At present, both factions
are selecting candidates for next year's national elections.
Political observers say
this will split the opposition vote and give President Mugabe and
his Zanu-PF easy victories.
Some political analysts
say that if the two MDC factions do not quickly establish a coalition,
the opposition party will lose the presidential vote and all but
a handful of seats in legislative elections due next March.
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