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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Ballot-beaten
and weary
Jason
Moyo, Mail & Guardian, (SA)
July 06, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-07-06-ballotbeaten-and-weary
Robert Mugabe's widely
condemned "re-election" last weekend appears to have broken
the resolve of many Zimbabweans.
Two weeks ago there was
steely determination among many voters to reject him, despite mounting
violence and the economic crisis.
But after a
week which began with Morgan Tsvangirai's last-minute withdrawal
from the poll and ended with Mugabe's whirlwind "inauguration",
resignation is taking over.
A day after the elections,
as state radio reported Mugabe was heading for a "landslide",
Dadirai, a clerk with a phone company, was waiting in line to play
last Saturday's Z$100-trillion lotto, hoping, she joked, for better
luck than Tsvangirai.
"Whatever happens
now has to be about solving the economic crisis. That's the biggest
concern for most of us," she said.
Few had any hope that
the proposed dialogue between Mugabe and Tsvangirai would make much
difference -- or happen at all.
"What will they
talk about? Just sharing power or solving our problems?" asked
Charity Njanji, a high school English teacher. Like most people,
she feels she is on her own. "I don't trust any politician
any longer. They say one thing and do the other. I have to concentrate
on my family."
Njanji was hired as an
election official in March but declined the job in the run-off,
saying "the job is not worth the money or the stress".
Some Zimbabweans still
see a ray of light. The head of a listed company declined to be
named but said he is encouraged by what he sees as a hardening anti-Mugabe
sentiment in the region.
"Mugabe can't continue
with things as they are. Even he must realise the economy will get
him in the end," the businessman said.
Official vote tallies
indicate a sudden doubling in support for Mugabe since the first-round
election and has become the subject of many jokes on Harare's streets.
In Harare central, the
postal ballot tally was 14 for Mugabe and none for Tsvangirai.
But according to Clifton,
a young middle-rank officer in the army who rents out an apartment
in the constituency, Mugabe still has support in army ranks.
"But many are a
bit impatient, especially about the economy," he said. "I
don't like Tsvangirai, but I hope the chiefs [top politicians] will
now really look at how they are running things."
Three observer groups
said the poll was not credible and the Pan-African Parliament went
further, calling for fresh elections.
But Zimbabweans have
very little appetite for another round of voting.
"New elections mean
more fighting and more bad news for the economy. Who wants that?"
asked newspaper vendor Nancy, cynically adding: "Let them rule."
Weeks ago, the buoyancy
of MDC supporters was such that anybody suggesting dialogue with
Mugabe risked a public flogging. But even the most radical anti-government
activists now grudgingly concede that Mugabe will be around for
a while longer.
"If talking brings
peace, why not?" said Makusha Chivara, an MDC activist in Ruwa,
a farming area east of Harare.
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