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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Government
of National Unity mooted amid increasing violence
IRIN News
June 19, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78827
The upsurge
in political violence in Zimbabwe, which has reportedly resulted
in the murder of five opposition activists in the past 24 hours,
is being attributed to attempts by the ruling ZANU-PF party to achieve
the upper hand in deciding who will hold sway in the composition
of a proposed government of national unity (GNU).
South Africa's President
Thabo Mbeki, appointed by the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) to act as mediator between ZANU-PF and the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) to resolve the political crisis, arrived
in Zimbabwe on 18 June and held meetings with both parties.
According to senior members
of both ZANU-PF and MDC, the only point of contention in setting
up a GNU was who would assume overall leadership. Mugabe's contempt
for MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who polled more support than Mugabe
in the first round of presidential voting, is common knowledge.
There is a precedent
for a GNU. After the massacres in Matabeleland and the Midlands
in the 1980s, which killed 20,000 civilians, Mugabe formed a coalition
government with his arch-rival, Joshua Nkomo, leader of the rival
liberation movement, ZAPU.
A ZANU-PF source told
IRIN that Mbeki spoke of the advantages of a GNU in separate meetings
with both parties, while also calling for the cessation of hostilities.
But after the discovery
on 19 June of the bodies of five murdered MDC activists in and around
the capital, Harare, Mbeki's plea for an end to the violence appears
to have fallen on deaf ears.
"Now it's about
70 we've lost," MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa told local media,
referring to the number of MDC supporters the party claims have
been killed since the 29 March election, in which ZANU-PF lost control
of parliament for the first time since independence in 1980.
With the 27 June presidential
run-off imminent, Tanzanian foreign minister Bernard Membe reportedly
said on 19 June: "According to SADC, there are fears that there
will be no free and fair elections in Zimbabwe, due to the prevailing
political and economic situation in that country."
SADC, which has given
previous Zimbabwean elections a clean bill of health despite the
misgivings of other observer missions, said it would increase the
number of its observers to 400, but according to Zambian Foreign
Affairs minister Kabinga Pande, only 210 were on the ground by 19
June.
The post-election violence
since the 29 March poll is leading to a growing number of calls
for the run-off election to be cancelled in favour of a negotiated
settlement.
"As ZANU-PF, we
feel that President Mugabe should be the leader of such a formation
(GNU), given his history as a founder-leader. Making him a subordinate
of Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the MDC, would be disrespectful.
An acceptable solution would be the Kenyan compromises, whereby
the head of state would remain in power while the position of prime
minister can be created for Tsvangirai," the ZANU-PF source
told IRIN.
ZANU-PF officials told
IRIN, on condition of anonymity, that threats of war, murder, abduction
and mass arrests of the opposition leadership and party members
were designed to break their spirits and make them "very eager
to form a GNU".
"For your
own information," an MDC official told IRIN, "when the
secretary-general of the MDC, Tendai Biti, was arrested,
he had just attended a meeting with his counterparts in ZANU-PF
on a possible GNU. ZANU-PF is using all tactics in the book to ensure
that Mugabe wins the [presidential] run-off, which would give him
moral authority to form a GNU."
Biti was arrested last
week after returning from South Africa and is facing treason charges,
which carry the death penalty.
The MDC official said
Biti and eight other MDC legislators on the government's wanted
list could be used as bargaining chips in the make-up of the GNU.
Mugabe's chief election
agent, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and Tsvangirai have both said the election
run-off was a legal requirement that needed to be fulfilled, and
that it was up to the winner to form an inclusive government.
Drums
of war
Further
doubts about the freedom and fairness of the upcoming run-off poll
were expressed on 18 June by the Pan African Parliament Observer
Team, one of the few other electoral observer missions permitted
by Mugabe's government to oversee the ballot.
The head of the Pan African
observer mission, Marwick Khumalo, told journalists at a media briefing
that "Beating the drums of war is not acceptable ... When people
make statements which are derogatory and inflammatory, they would
know that they can incite other people into being violent."
At a rally in Mashonaland
West Province on 16 June, Mugabe warned: "You decide for yourselves:
to vote for war, or vote for people who work for the development
of the country."
Responding to
reports that members of the armed services had cast
postal ballots under the supervision of their senior officers,
Khumalo said he had requested a meeting with the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) to express their concerns, but "What we have
received is a letter apologising that they cannot attend or respond
to our invitation for a meeting."
"They have now invited
us to a meeting, together with other observers, on June 23,"
he said.
The observer team visited
trouble spots and on one occasion met a man displaced by the violence
after his wife had been killed with an axe by assailants, and her
body buried.
Khumalo said, "It
is honestly regrettable that violence has resurfaced in this manner.
Instead of concentrating on observing a smooth election, violence
has come top of the agenda, where we now have to observe and investigate
and, as you know, investigating is time-consuming."
Haile Mankerios, UN assistant
secretary-general for political affairs, arrived in Zimbabwe on
17 June and after a meeting with Mugabe told journalists: "I
am here to find out what measures are being put in place to ensure
there is a free, fair and transparent run-off, and what we as the
UN can do to support Zimbabwe."
Mugabe agreed to the
UN envoy's presence after meeting with UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon at the recent conference on the global food crisis in the
Italian capital, Rome. Ban expressed "profound alarm"
on 18 June about the prevailing conditions in Zimbabwe ahead of
the 27 June ballot.
But a Zimbabwe government
official told the state-controlled newspaper, The Herald, that "He
[Mankerios] is here to assess Zimbabwe's technical capacity [to
hold the election], following a meeting between President Mugabe
and the UN Secretary-General in Rome."
Mugabe
condemned by his peers
An
array of Africa's luminaries, including Nobel laureates Kofi Annan,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Wangari Maathai, signed an open
letter in their personal capacity, calling for the run-off elections
to be conducted in "a peaceful and transparent manner that
allows the citizens of Zimbabwe to express freely their political
will."
The signatories include
a number of former presidents: Burundi's Pierre Buyoya, Mozambique's
Joaquim Chissano, Nigeria's Abdusalami Alhaji Abubakar, Ghana's
Jerry Rawlings, Zambia's Kenneth Kaunda, Botswana's Ketumile Masire
and Festus Mogae, Tanzania's Benjamin Mkapa and Ali Hassan Mwinyi,
among others, as well as business leaders such as Mo Ibrahim, founder
of Celtel International, and musicians like Youssou N'Dour.
"As Africans, we
consider the forthcoming elections to be critical. We are aware
of the attention of the world. More significantly, we are conscious
of the huge number of Africans who want to see a stable, democratic
and peaceful Zimbabwe," the letter said.
"Consequently, we
are deeply troubled by the current reports of intimidation, harassment
and violence. It is vital that the appropriate conditions are created,
so that the presidential run-off is conducted in a peaceful, free
and fair manner. Only then can the political parties conduct their
election campaigning in a way that enables the citizens to express
freely their political will," the signatories confirmed.
"To this end it
will be necessary to have an adequate number of independent electoral
observers, both during the election process and to verify the results."
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