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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Zambia: New president installed amidst accusations of vote
rigging
By Barry Mason
5 January 2002
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Levy Mwanawasa, the candidate of the ruling Movement for Multi-party
Democracy (MMD), was sworn in as president of Zambia on January
2 amidst claims of vote rigging. The 10 opposition parties who
ran candidates denounced the result as a fraud and boycotted the
ceremony in the capital Lusaka.
In the December 27 ballot, voters went to the polls to elect
a new president and 150 National Assembly deputies. Zambia, with
a population of 11 million, has 2.6 million registered voters
out of some 5 million eligible to vote. In spite of earlier predictions
of a low turnout, polling hours had to be extended in order to
cope with the large numbers wanting to vote.
The retiring president Frederick Chiluba had been in office
for two terms, a period of ten years. He was first elected president
in 1991, ousting Kenneth Kaunda, who had been president since
Zambian gained independence from Britain in 1964. Kaunda was forced
to step down when his support collapsed after he cut food subsidies.
Chilubas background was as a trade union official, and
he came to power promising to change the corrupt governmental
system and modernise the economy. What he has actually done is
to implement IMF policies more rigorously than any other African
leader.
Chiluba, who has been accused of murdering political opponents
in his bid to stay in power, attempted to overrule the constitution
by running for a third term, but in the end opted to stand down
in the face of intense opposition within his party, the MMD, and
in the country at large. The struggle led to a break away from
the MMD, the Front for Democracy and Development (FDD).
Incoming President Mwanawasa was vice president to Chiluba
until 1994, and seems to have been chosen as a figurehead, since
his health is known to be poor. Chiluba will remain MMD party
chairman and through this post will probably attempt to wield
real power behind the scenes.
With the votes for 148 out of the 150 constituencies counted,
the result for the presidential election was given by the Electoral
Commission of Zambia as being 29.16 percent for Mwanawasa, 27.15
percent for Anderson Mazoka, of the United Party for National
Development (UPND) and 13.16 percent for Christon Tembo, of the
Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD). Other parties
presidential candidates votes totalled 30.53 percent.
Some 300 foreign observers from the Commonwealth, the European
Union (EU), the Organisation of African Unity, the Southern Africa
Development Community and the US Carter Center monitored the elections.
There were also 23,000 local monitors.
Michael Meadowcroft, head of the EU monitors, said they were
investigating a number of anomalies. In some cases
there were discrepancies between the votes for presidential candidates
and National Assembly deputies. In one case, in the Copper
Belt, 13,000 people voted in the presidential elections but in
the same area only 4,000 voted for the parliamentary candidates.
This is quite clearly very odd. I would have expected the electoral
commission to have investigated these discrepancies before they
announced the result, he said.
Ngande Mwanajiti, chairman of the Coalition 2001 alliance of
local monitors, expressed his concern that there had been incidents
that could indicate vote rigging had taken place. He said we
must therefore not take lightly speculations that elections results
may be tampered with.
The result of the presidential election had been expected by
last weekend, with the new president due to be sworn in on Saturday
December 29. Following the election, UPND candidate Anderson Mazoka,
a wealthy businessman, claimed that the EU observers had given
him 36 percent of the vote compared to 23 percent for Mwanawasa.
I will not accept an election fraud and the people of Zambia
will not accept it, he said.
Mazoka and representatives of the opposition parties met with
High Court Judge Peter Chitengi in the early hours of January
1, seeking a recount and verification of ballots. The judge said
he would meet with them later in the day to hear their arguments.
Thousands of protestors ringed the Supreme Court building and
marched on Chilubas residence, clashing with police. A Reuters
report quoted one protestor saying, We voted for change
and we believe we got change, but now somebody want to steal it
from us and we shall not accept it.
Judge Chitengi said he would not make a pronouncement until
January 2, when he declared Mwanawasa the winner immediately prior
to the beginning of the inauguration ceremony.
Mwanawasas installation as president took place in an
atmosphere of tension in Zambia. Shops and offices in Lusaka and
in the city of Kitwe in the copper belt remained closed, where
opposition to Chiluba is particularly strong. Privatisation of
the copper mines in 1999 has led to mass unemployment, with strikes
by miners and railworkers being suppressed by paramilitary police
and soldiers.
In June last year, public sector workers came out on a strike
in protest at Chilubas implementation of IMF policies and
in support of a 100 percent pay increase to cope with rising food
prices. Nurses at Lusakas main teaching hospital said that
the death rate had doubled as a result of Chilubas attacks
on healthcare.
The results of the parliamentary constituency votes have still
to be declared; analysts have predicted that the MMD would lose
its massive majority. But none of the opposition candidates offer
any real alternative for the Zambian working class and peasant
massesindeed many of the opposition parties and candidates
are offshoots of the ruling MMD.
The majority of Zambians face dire poverty, in a country rich
with minerals and having good agricultural potential. Three-quarters
of the population live on less than US$1 a day. According to Africa
Confidential, 80 percent of the rural population live in poverty
and 60 percent of the population suffer chronic malnutrition.
Inflation is 19 percent and the price of maize, a staple food,
has shot up as a result of shortages. The price of mealie-meal,
another staple, has doubled.
The mass of Zambian people despised the Chiluba regime. He
was loudly booed when he went to polling booths in Ndola on election
day, where the crowd refused the orders from security officers
that they break the queue to let Chiluba in. As he departed they
shouted, You go and rest in peace, you have enjoyed enough.
See Also:
Strike wave rocks Zambia
[14 June 2001]
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