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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Opposition
turning up the heat
IRIN News
April 15, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77777
A call for an
indefinite stayaway by Zimbabwe's opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, had a mixed response on 15 April, the day
protest action began.
Most private commuter
operators withheld their transport but resumed normal operations
by midmorning, when most businesses in the capital, Harare, opened
their doors after adopting a wait-and-see approach.
"I could not put
on a suit because I was afraid that I could be harassed by people
who might have thought that I was betraying them," a public
relations consultant, who identified himself only as "John",
told IRIN.
"The truth of the
matter is that I support the stay away, but my boss is a ZANU-PF
supporter and I fear being victimized." About half of his colleagues
had said they could not come to work because there was no transport.
The MDC's call to informal
traders to refrain from business was doomed from the start, although
youths forced some vendors to pack up their stalls.
"I am in support
of the call to have the results of the presidential election made
known, for we are in a state of anxiety, but the stomach comes first.
As an informal trader, the sole breadwinner in my family, the quandary
is between running around to sell my second-hand clothes and being
seated at home to show solidarity with the MDC," Tariro Chiwewete,
40, a single mother of three, told IRIN.
"I think [President]
Mugabe and his lieutenants know that their time is over and are
just trying to provoke people to stage mass protests so that they
can find a reason to stay in power. How else can one explain their
reluctance to announce the results? It shows they have been beaten,"
she said.
The MDC is adopting a
more militant stance against Mugabe's ZANU-PF government over its
refusal to release the results of the presidential poll on 29 March.
A time
for destiny
A
High Court petition by the MDC to force the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(ZEC) to publish the results was dismissed with costs on 14 April;
in response the MDC has turned to its urban strongholds and called
for an indefinite mass stayaway.
In a statement on 14
April the MDC said: "For over two weeks since 29 March, ZEC
is failing to release the presidential poll results, a situation
that has caused an electoral impasse, as the people of Zimbabwe
who voted in their millions have been waiting patiently for the
results."
The statement said the
time was ripe for Zimbabweans to take "destiny into their own
hands as the ZANU-PF regime is not letting them have peace and democracy",
and urged workers, businesspeople and informal traders to stay at
home until the ZEC released the presidential results.
The MDC insists that
according to results published outside each polling station, their
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, won the presidential poll by the required
50 percent plus one vote, negating the need for a second round of
voting.
The ZEC has announced
senatorial and parliamentary election results, in which the ruling
ZANU-PF lost its majority in parliament for the first time since
independence from Britain in 1980.
After publishing these
results, the electoral commission secretly moved its national command
centre in Harare, and has argued that the delay was a consequence
of it collating and verifying the presidential ballots.
The commission has heeded
a call by ZANU-PF to recount votes in 23 constituencies where it
claims Mugabe was cheated of votes. The recount will take place
on 19 April, even though the High Court ordered the recount to be
stopped, according to local reports.
The ZEC parliamentary
results gave Tsvangirai's MDC 96 seats while Mugabe's ZANU-PF secured
94. A breakaway faction of the MDC garnered nine seats while ZANU-PF's
former minister of information, Jonathan Moyo, who ran as an independent,
won his seat.
The MDC described the
29 March elections as a referendum for "food, jobs and a better
Zimbabwe", and said "a shocked ZANU-PF regime has failed
to come to terms with the defeat and is doing everything in its
power in order to subvert the people of Zimbabwe's will."
The police, who have
banned demonstrations, said in a statement responding to the stayaway
that "the call by the MDC Tsvangirai faction is aimed at disturbing
peace and will be resisted firmly by the law enforcement agents,
whose responsibility is to maintain law and order in any part of
the country."
On the eve of the stayaway
police patrolled the capital's suburbs in riot gear and on the day
police trucks cruised the streets, with the police chanting revolutionary
songs and beating the sides of their vehicles with batons in an
in an apparent show of force.
Labour
unions may join stayaway
Lovemore Matombo, president of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), a militant labour federation
that has also urged the ZEC to speedily release the results of the
presidential vote, warned that his organisation might join the stayaway
call.
"This [mass stayaway]
seems the most immediate option that the MDC has after all the other
gentlemanly strategies: going to court, approaching SADC [Southern
African Development Community] and talking to ZEC, failed,"
Matombo told IRIN.
"Adopting militancy
is a potent strategy in our given circumstances, and my personal
feeling is that the MDC took too long to realize that it should
effectively use the urban voter as a vehicle to push the government
to accept the importance of publicizing the results," he commented.
Matombo said the delay
in announcing the results was pushing the country "towards
an explosion and chaos", and vowed that the ZCTU "would
not sit back and watch as the political situation degenerates".
"Government might
take advantage of a seemingly docile population and declare everything
in its favour, but the time will come when we will pour into the
streets and show them that we cannot be taken for granted,"
Matombo said.
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