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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe
must go
ZimConservation
April 05, 2008
http://www.zimconservation.com/
For the last 10 years,
Zimbabwe has been in the grip of a downward economic vortex. Most
citizens set aside their desires to make Zimbabwe a better place.
Instead they had to focus on surviving to the next day as basic
political conditions like property rights, the rule of law, freedom
of expression, and an independent judiciary were undermined.
On Friday, however, Zimbabweans
voted in a general election that is one of the first windows of
opportunity for political change in the last 8 years. In spite of
the fact that the pre-election conditions have been grossly unfair,
early results are pointing to an MDC (opposition) landslide win
and it appears that Mugabe is having more trouble than he anticipated
subverting the will of the people. According to the BBC:
[An MDC spokesperson]
said the electoral commission was planning to announce that Mr Mugabe
had won 52% of the vote - just enough to avoid a run-off. The MDC
would not accept these results, he said. Deputy Information Minister
Bright Matonga denied the polls would be rigged and said the president
would accept defeat. "We don't expect to lose... It's going
to be a very tight contest and if he loses, you have to accept,"
he told the BBC. Mr Matonga also denied rumours that Mr Mugabe had
gone to Malaysia or was planning to impose a state of emergency.
Riot police have been patrolling the capital, Harare, and other
urban areas and residents have been told to stay indoors. A senior
Zanu-PF source has told a BBC contributor that security officials
met on Sunday to decide who should tell Mr Mugabe he had lost, with
some refusing to take the job.
Apart from the immediate
humanitarian issues, political change is particularly important
to Zimbabwe's wildlife, much of which has been poached and destroyed
over the last 10 years. In a country where the commercial agricultural
sector has been decimated, wildlife through tourism and hunting
operations has the potential to form up to 16% of the GDP. This
economic sector requires very little financial outlay, just restoration
of the rule of law and good wildlife management practices. Restoring
populations of Zimbabwe's rich mammal fauna like giraffes, zebras,
eland, impala, wild dogs and rhinos will take time, and so will
tourists' bruised confidence in the country. Other economic sectors
which may require years of complex legal battles and unresolved
disputes to sort out. However, wildlife could recover in a 5-10
year timeframe with minimal investments. It should be a no-brainer
for the new government.
Help is also available
from the foreign conservation funding agencies and NGO's that are
eyeing out a 'virgin' African country with good infrastructure and
a great potential 'bang for their conservation buck' if they can
quickly establish an on-the-ground presence. They can see that Zimbabwe
has a huge amount of potential and they are eager to take credit
for re-building what was the continent's greatest conservation success
story. Should Mugabe have the good sense to relinquish his 28-year
grip on power, the new government led by Morgan Tsvangirai should
make recovery of Zimbabwe's rich wildlife heritage an early priority.
At ZimConservation we
have been working for the last 4 years to keep track of the situation
and help publicise policy recommendations to save Zimbabwe's rich
wildlife heritage.
Visit the ZimConservation
fact sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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