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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Opposition
braced for dirty war as Mugabe clings on to power
R W Johnson, The Sunday Times
April 06, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3689991.ece
Zimbabwe was
bracing itself yesterday for the possibility that President Robert
Mugabe, forced into an expected election runoff against his opposition
challenger Morgan Tsvangirai, could mobilise an army of thugs to
beat, intimidate and terrify voters, while taking emergency powers
to vary the electoral regulations so as to make ballot-stuffing
easier.
Both Britain
and the United States are exercising strong diplomatic pressure
on Mugabe not to follow this route. But some diplomatic observers
believe that it may be the ageing despot's only way of keeping his
vow to die in State House.
Mugabe's deputy
information minister, Bright Matonga, who claimed last week that
the president's Zanu-PF party had let him down in the first round
of voting, predicted a resounding victory in the second, saying:
"We only applied 25% of our energy in the first round. That
[the runoff] is when we are going to unleash the other 75%."
What will be
unleashed, according to leaders of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), are war veterans, pro-government militia and the security
forces in a display of brute force aimed at enabling Mugabe, 84,
to cling to power.
Tsvangirai,
the MDC leader, who warned that Mugabe was about to launch a "war
against the people" said his party was reluctant to take part
in any runoff because of the growing risks of violence. In any case,
he argued, there was no need for one because he had won last weekend's
presidential election outright and was already forming a new government.
He called Mugabe a lame duck president who "must concede to
allow us to move on with the business of rebuilding and reconstructing
the country".
According to
the MDC, Tsvangirai secured 50.3% of the vote, enough to be named
president. It is understood that Mugabe's politburo was briefed
on Friday that Tsvangirai had won 47.7%, compared with 43.4% for
Mugabe and the remainder for Simba Makoni, a former finance minister
expelled by Zanu-PF. If confirmed, this result would require a runoff.
The official
tally has yet to be declared and when MDC lawyers went to the High
Court yesterday in an attempt to force an announcement, their way
into the building was blocked by police from Mugabe's office over
the road. One of the lawyers, Alec Muchadehama, said the police
had threatened to shoot them. The case was eventually postponed
until today.
The longer the
delay in announcing the presidential election result, opposition
activists say, the more time Mugabe will have to mobilise his forces.
Reports yesterday
suggested that attempts to intimidate the opposition could already
be under way. According to one African news agency, Zimbabwean soldiers
beat supporters of the MDC in some parts of the country to punish
them for "premature" election victory celebrations. At
least 17 people were said to have been beaten so badly that they
had to be taken to hospital.
The war veterans
- 1,000 of whom marched through Harare in silence on Friday - accused
the MDC of defying the law by putting out results before the official
electoral commission was ready. The tactics were "a provocation
against freedom fighters", said the veterans. They vowed to
repel any attempt by white farmers ousted since 2000 to repossess
land which is now held by black Zimbabweans.
"The election
has been seen as a way to reopen the invasion of our people by whites,"
said Jabulani Sibanda, their leader. "We cannot just sit back
when there are all these provocations."
Zanu-PF's youth
brigades, known as "green bombers" because of their military
style of clothing, were said to be ready to return to action alongside
the veterans, evoking memories of the pounding of opposition supporters
- some of whom had their homes burnt down - in past campaigns.
Yesterday's
events followed a week of claim and counterclaim about Mugabe's
intentions. At one point it was reported that he was negotiating
a dignified exit and yesterday there were suggestions that his wife
Grace was demanding that he resign to protect the interests of their
children. There was no corroboration of these reports.
The Sunday Times
has learnt the inside story of what happened last Sunday, the day
after the poll. By Sunday afternoon the theoretically independent
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, the body under Justice George Chiweshe
which is charged with conducting the elections, communicated its
initial estimates of the result to the Zanu-PF politburo: Tsvangirai
58%, Robert Mugabe 27% and Makoni 15%. These estimates were based
on too narrow an urban sample and were too favourable to Tsvangirai
and his MDC, but the message was clear: Mugabe had lost. The politburo,
particularly Mugabe himself, hit the roof.
According to
an account sourced to a commission official, Mugabe then ordered
it to declare him elected with 53%. He was angry at Makoni's "treachery"
and demanded that his vote be reduced to 5%.
This produced
resistance from the commission and also from the army, police and
intelligence chiefs.
The commission
objected that manipulation of the results on such a huge scale would
be too obvious, while the security chiefs were concerned that the
country might become ungovernable if the popular will was so blatantly
flouted.
At this stage
Thabo Mbeki, South Africa's president, took a hand - he was continuously
on the phone from Pretoria and had his emissaries in Harare. Mbeki's
overweening interest is to maintain Zanu-PF in power as a sister
liberation movement of his own African National Congress. He fears
a possible domino effect throughout southern Africa if a movement
that had wrested power from the whites in a liberation war is seen
to fail and perhaps then fall to bits.
However, Mbeki
wants Mugabe to go. Instead, he would like Makoni to succeed - a
younger, modernising technocrat who would, he hopes, restore both
his party's and his country's fortunes.
Out of Mbeki's
discussions came the notion that the results should be "adjusted"
so that Tsvangirai was brought back under the 50% mark, perhaps
to 47%-49%, while Mugabe could get 41% and Makoni 10%-12%.
With no candidate
over 50% this would produce the necessity of a second-round runoff
and Mugabe should then withdraw, leaving Zanu-PF to rally behind
Makoni. Provided the security forces could be given a strong role
in the way that the runoff was organised and conducted, Makoni could
then be given just over 50% and Tsvangirai kept out.
As word spread
into the South African media that Mbeki had been heavily engaged,
his office quickly denied that he had been involved at all. By the
end of the week Mbeki was publicly appealing for all sides to respect
the vote, whatever it had been.
At a conference
on progressive governance convened by Gordon Brown in Hertfordshire
yesterday, Mbeki told the international community to wait for the
full election results, saying it was not time for action. "No,
it's time to wait," he said.
The proposal
stitched together by Mbeki might have worked, provided the armed
forces were willing to give Makoni some fairly muscular support.
"We were
saved from this outcome," an MDC source said, "by our
most reliable ally, Robert Mugabe, who absolutely refused to stand
down."
This brought
matters back to square one, leaving the security chiefs and the
electoral commission in disarray. Constantine Chiwenga, head of
the armed forces, together with Mugabe's cousin, Perence Shiri,
are said to have wanted the army to take power itself. They were
faced down by others, including Philip Sibanda, the head of the
army, and Augustine Chihuri, the police commissioner.
Chris Mbanga,
Tsvangirai's chief of staff, said he had also heard of the coup
plot. "But the fact is they couldn't have got far," he
said. "We have our own people in there at every level and they
would have resisted. The police and the army want change too, you
know."
Meanwhile, the
drama had shifted to the commission's command centre where Mbanga
sat monitoring the parliamentary and presidential results for the
MDC as they came through. With the electoral register absurdly out
of date and so many having fled or died, the voting totals were
often very small.
Mbanga suddenly
began to notice some considerable anomalies. In general, in every
constituency Tsvangirai was running well ahead of the score achieved
by the MDC parliamentary candidate - but he noticed that in Budiriro
the MDC candidate had won more than 15,000 votes and Tsvangirai
only 12,000. Then he noticed that at Mount Darwin West in Mashonaland
North, Vice-President Joyce Mujuru had won 6,071 votes according
to the tallies posted up outside the polling stations there, but
the commission had given her 13,270. Similarly, at Shamva North
in Mashonaland West, the cabinet minister Nicholas Goche had won
4,195 votes, according to the polling station tallies, but the commission
credited him with 10,385.
"Once I
saw this and some more very fishy figures indeed coming in for Mashonaland
Central, I just said, okay, I'm not signing for anything more,"
he explained.
Instead, Mbanga
insisted on an audit of every single seat, with all the original
tally papers from all the polling stations brought in so they could
be compared. Thus, while Mugabe has been widely blamed for not declaring
the results more quickly, it is the opposition that has made counting
such a slow process in its determination to prevent cheating.
By Monday the
police and army were everywhere on the streets and a few independent
websites were showing the MDC running well ahead of Zanu-PF in both
the parliamentary elections and the presidential poll.
Most people
were dependent on state television which leaked out the parliamentary
results at a snail's pace, always leaving Zanu-PF one ahead of MDC.
Of the presidential results there was no word.
Ordinary Zimbabweans
had no idea of the drama being played out. So terrible has been
the toll of the Mugabe years that the struggle just to stay alive
preoccupies those who are left - so many have died and at least
a third of the population has fled the country. Among those who
remain, 80% are unemployed and most go hungry.
Every morning
begins in the towns with huge queues outside banks and building
societies, for nobody may withdraw more than Z$500m a day - about
£6.
Harare is the
only city where you can see large-denomination banknotes scattered
on the pavement. So rapid has inflation become that all notes bear
an expiry date after which they are invalid and the central bank
adds another nought or two to the next set of notes. People just
tear up invalid notes and throw them away.
When you speak
to people in the queues you realise how beaten down they are. "I
have three children, all hungry. I've sold everything in the house
except a table and our beds," said Margaret Zimondi, a secretary.
"We're
just waiting to hear that Mugabe rigged the elections again, as
usual," said Learnmore Maposa, a carpenter.
"Things
are much worse in the countryside," he added. "I went
to see my mother in her village last weekend. They can't cook on
oil stoves any more because the price of diesel is too high, so
they have to cook with electricity. Often there is none, so they
just go to bed hungry night after night. My mother can't weigh more
than 35kg [77lb] now. In our village so many have died already.
I am frightened for her."
When the parliamentary
results finally came out, the state media tried to depict the situation
as a tie when the opposition had clearly won. The MDC had 99 seats,
Zanu-PF 96. The MDC splinter party led by Arthur Mutambara had 11
and there was one (pro-Tsvangirai) independent. Three candidates
had died before election day, but all in almost certain MDC seats
so the combined opposition has 111 out of 217 seats today and will
end up with 114 out of 220.
This result
alone would make it difficult for a Zanu-PF president to govern.
The party promptly accused the MDC of bribing officials in 16 constituencies
and demanded that the results be overturned.
As the week
progressed the tension grew but observers sensed on every hand the
resistance of the Zanu-PF state, facing a situation it had never
dreamt of. Mugabe called a meeting of the Zanu-PF high command and,
as usual, imposed his will. There would be a runoff and he would
run, and meanwhile the opposition and foreign journalists would
be put in their place. Armed police duly raided MDC offices and
hotels housing foreign journalists.
Ahead lies a
bruising second round. It is quite possible that Mugabe will break
the constitution and insist on a three-month gap before a second
round, using that period to try to smash the MDC and terrify the
electorate into voting him back in. But the odds are against him
now.
£1bn
aid plan
A vigorous aid programme to rebuild Zimbabwe's economy, society
and agriculture would quickly follow an opposition victory, with
Britain in a prominent role, writes David Watts.
With £1
billion to be spent, the International Monetary Fund would take
the lead in stabilising the currency - inflation is forecast to
hit 500,000% by May. The plan would also involve the World Bank,
UN and EU. Britain is already putting £45m into the country
over the next two years to help HIV/Aids victims and to provide
food, shelter and education. More could be made available to help
to resettle refugees - there are 800,000 in South Africa alone.
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