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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
'If
you show that you support MDC, you will starve'
Tiseke Kasambala,
The Mail & Guardian (SA)
March 19, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articledirect.aspx?articleid=335044&area=supzimelect0308_content
Credible elections
in Zimbabwe were among the main objectives of the talks
between the Zimbabwean government and the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) last year. But despite new regulations,
Zimbabwe's polls are unlikely to be free or fair.
President Robert
Mugabe's government would like the world to believe otherwise, arguing
that political space has been opened up for the opposition to campaign.
Neighbouring states should look beyond the rhetoric as, sadly, nothing
could be further from the truth.
For weeks now,
I've been travelling through Zimbabwe's 10 provinces. Ordinary voters
around the country described to me how supporters of the ruling
party have physically attacked and intimidated people perceived
to support the opposition.
Food has become
a political weapon. In nearly all the provinces I visited, Zimbabweans
told me that only supporters of the ruling Zanu-PF receive state-subsidised
grain or farming equipment. An elderly man from Marange in Manicaland
province told me: "If you show yourself to support the opposition,
you will starve." In Mutare, even a Zanu-PF loyalist confirmed
that the party manipulates the distribution of food according to
political loyalty: "It is very easy. Only those who are on
the councillors' lists can access the grain," she told me.
"At our rallies, only known supporters of Zanu-PF are allowed
to attend."
Despite improved
electoral laws, across Zimbabwe I found a chaotic -- and easily
abused -- voter registration process. The electoral commission is
unprepared and partisan. The voting procedure will be new and more
complex than before, but there has been minimal voter education
around the country. The opposition's access to the broadcast media
is restricted.
A local activist
from Makonde constituency in Mashonaland West province told me about
the intense intimidation of opposition supporters in his area. "The
opposition MDC are visited daily by Zanu-PF youth who shout and
sing outside their homes," he said. "They call them sell-outs
and tell them they will deal with the MDC candidates after the elections."
In spite of
the intimidation, violence has been less conspicuous than in previous
elections - in part because of prohibitions in the reformed Electoral
Act. But, given the widespread violence during elections in
2000 and 2002, mere threats or allusions to past acts are enough
to scare people.
In Masvingo
province, a primary-school teacher told me how ruling party youths
attacked him after he urged people to register to vote.
"They hit
me with clubs on my head," he told me. "They displayed
me before the rest of the school and now they are keeping an eye
on me." Terrible scars were still visible on his head a month
after the attack.
The police claim
they are taking a "zero tolerance" approach to violence
ahead of the polls, although many members of the police were previously
involved in attacks on the opposition, civil society activists and
perceived opposition supporters. None of these incidents, documented
by Human Rights Watch, have been investigated. The teacher in Masvingo
reported the incident, but the perpetrators were never caught.
The onus for
reporting violations now rests on regional observers, in particular
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) observer mission.
International and local observers who charged that previous elections
in 2000 and 2002 were blatantly fraudulent were not invited to return
for parliamentary elections in 2005, nor for the general elections.
Mugabe's government
claims that the elections will conform to the SADC guidelines and
principles governing democratic elections. South Africans and their
SADC neighbours have a key role to play in the run-up to the elections.
SADC should call on the Zimbabwean government to grant access to
all election sites. To gauge compliance, observers need to judge
the political context in which the elections are being held, not
just the voting process itself.
Previous post-election
assessments by SADC were alarmingly positive, despite widespread
human rights abuses and irregularities in the last three polls.
If South Africa and other SADC observers are serious about ending
Zimbabwe's political crisis, then another round of flawed elections
in Zimbabwe cannot be followed by a "business-as-usual"
approach.
South Africans
have already seen hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans vote with
their feet by crossing the Limpopo to flee hunger, violence and
persecution. Now is the time for SADC to help ordinary Zimbabweans
to exercise their right to vote freely at home.
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