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Zimbabwe: Tsvangirai agrees to second round of elections
By Chris Talbot
13 May 2008
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After weeks of delay since the March 29 elections, Zimbabwe
faces a second round presidential runoff. Last weekend Morgan
Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), finally agreed to stand in the runoff against incumbent
President Robert Mugabe.
Results from the first round were delayed until May 2 when
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), appointed by the ZANU-PF
government, announced that Tsvangirai had won 47.9 percent of
the vote, against 43.2 percent for Mugabe, insufficient for a
clear victory. The ZEC has not yet set a date for the runoff,
although legally it should take place within three weeks.
Tsvangirai has previously insisted that he was the outright
winner and the vote had been rigged. However, rather than allow
Mugabe to claim victory, after days of internal debate and no
doubt consultations with Western governments, the MDC agreed to
take part in the runoff. Tsvangirai put forward a list of conditions
for participation in the votean end to violent attacks on
its supporters, reconstitution of the ZEC, acceptance of international
election observers and that neighboring countries of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) help police the electionswhich
ZANU-PF has already refused.
The MDC is led by white businessmen and trade union bureaucrats,
with a programme to bring Zimbabwe back into free-market capitalism
and under International Monetary Fund (IMF) control. It relies
on making appeals to the West and has made no attempt to defend
its supporters against escalating violence. We know that
another election may bring more violence, more gloom, more betrayal,
Tsvangirai admitted.
Western governments, especially Britain and the United States,
have stepped up their denunciations of the Mugabe regime since
the election and are mounting a diplomatic offensive to back the
MDC. President George Bush raised the issue of Zimbabwes
government in a recent news conference, saying, The violence
and intimidation is simply unacceptable.
US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi
Frazer went further, saying that the international community
has a responsibility to step in and to try to stop that government
from beating its own population. Whatever intervention is
being discussed, the US has lost patience with the softly
softly diplomatic approach to Zimbabwe of South African
President Thabo Mbeki. Bush said it is really incumbent
upon the nations in the neighborhood to step up and lead, and
recognize that the will of the people must be respected, and recognize
that that will come about because theyre tired of failed
leadership.
Last week US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telephoned
the presidents of Zambia, Botswana, and Tanzaniathe most
pro-Western countries in the SADCcalling on them to use
their influence in Zimbabwe. She pointedly failed to phone Mbeki.
Mugabe and his government were clearly taken aback by the size
of the vote against them in the March elections. ZANU-PF lost
control of the state parliament in elections that took place simultaneously
with the poll for president. It is the biggest electoral setback
it has received since coming to power in 1980 after independence
was granted.
After a week of internal conflict in the ZANU-PF leadership
following the election, with rumors circulating that Mugabe could
step down or that some type of power-sharing government could
be formed, the hard-line faction around Mugabe decided to delay
announcement of results and a runoff as long as possible while
it organized brutal repression throughout the country to intimidate
all potential opposition.
According to Africa Confidential, the repression is
being led by Legal Affairs Secretary Emmerson Mnangagwa. He was
leader of Zimbabwes secret police, the Central Intelligence
Organisation after independence, responsible for the suppression
and killing of thousands of opponents of ZANU in Matabeleland
in the 1980s. As key man in the looting operation carried out
by Zimbabwe in the Congo war of 1998-2003, he is one of the richest
men in ZANU-PF.
Mnangagwa was demoted by Mugabe in 2004 when it became clear
he was attempting to succeed him as president, but came to the
fore last year by leading the group in ZANU-PF calling for Mugabe
to continue in office.
Mugabe uses his history as a leader of the national liberation
movement against the Western-backed white racist regime in the
1970s to pose as an opponent of imperialism, but since taking
power in the 1980s his regime supported capitalism and was highly
regarded by Western governments. It was only when the IMF measures,
which Mugabe had accepted, became too burdensome and undermined
the system of patronage by which ZANU-PF rules, and when the MDC
was set up and began gaining support, that Mugabe came into conflict
with the Western powers at the end of the 1990s.
The economy in Zimbabwe is now in such a perilous state that
Mugabe no longer has the means to buy votes and patronage, and
even in rural areas, where until recently he could count on support,
ZANU-PFs vote has collapsed. According to official figures
from Zimbabwes Central Statistical Office annual inflation
in February this year was 164,900 percent, unemployment is over
80 percent and life expectancy was last recorded at 37 yearslargely
due to endemic HIV/AIDs. More than 3 million people have fled
the country, mainly to South Africa.
Human Rights Watch reports that the population in large parts
of Zimbabwe in the period up to the run-off election are being
terrorized by the army, by the government-backed militia known
as the war-veterans and by ZANU-PF supporters. Anyone
that is even perceived to be an MDC supporter, in rural areas
as well as in the cities, faces intimidation, beatings, arrest
and torture. Human Rights Watch have compiled dozens of eyewitness
reports showing that ZANU-PF supporters and war veterans
are drawing up lists of suspected oppositionists who are then
targeted. They are also forcing people to attend meetings to swear
allegiance to ZANU-PF. Some 30 or so people have been killed and
several hundred hospitalized, with a far larger number subject
to beatings. Schoolteachers in rural areas who act as vote counters
in elections have been targeted. The BBC reports cases of teachers
being issued with certificates after a beating to spare them from
further attack.
Farm workers have also been attacked, with Zimbabwean human
rights group, the Justice for Agriculture Trust, detailing 142
attacks on farms since April 5. The farm workers trade union
says that some 40,000 of its members have been affected. The report
states that workers at 36 percent of the 400 commercial farms
still in operation, including the small number that are still
white owned, have been intimidated, subject to beatings and driven
out of their jobs.
Impact on South Africa
The crisis in Zimbabwe is having an impact on South African
politics, exacerbating the division in the ruling African National
Congress between the faction around President Mbeki and the rival
faction supporting Jacob Zuma.
Zuma was elected ANC President last December, defeating Mbeki.
He is backed by the trade union bureaucracy in COSATU and the
South African Communist Party (SACP). He has used populist demagogy
to win support in an economic climate where South Africas
high growth rate, reflecting the key mining sector, has benefited
mainly the established white ruling class and a layer of black
businessmen, but has seen growing poverty and unemployment in
the mass of the population.
Such is the bitterness of the dispute between the rival factions
that Zuma faces a trial for corruption later this year, which
the Mbeki faction hopes will prevent him from gaining the presidency
in 2009. He previously faced corruption charges and was sacked
from office as deputy president by Mbeki, though the case was
dropped in 2006. Zuma also faced a trial on rape charges in 2006,
for which he was acquitted.
Zimbabwe has become the key issue that Zuma and his advisors
are using to garner Western support. He recently toured the capitals
of Europe attempting to overcome the concern in business and political
circles about his trade union and SACP backing by expressing public
criticisms of the Zimbabwe regime. In contrast to Mbeki, who recently
even denied that there was a crisis in Zimbabwe, Zuma attacked
Mugabe, saying, I dont think that it is acceptable
in a democratic system that if you lose an election you can stay
on by force.
In Britain he had an hour-long meeting with Prime Minister
Gordon Brown, after which they made a joint statement to the press
calling for an end to the post-election violence in Zimbabwe.
Zuma is also rising as a star in American political circles
as an alternative to Mbeki. Time magazine put Zuma in its
2008 top 100 list and in its list of 20 of the worlds most
influential leaders, explaining that His pro-poor rhetoric
resonates with many ordinary South Africans who have not benefited
from Mbekis business-friendly policies.
Despite calls from COSATU and the SACP for more state intervention
into South Africas economy, there is no indication that
Zuma and his advisors actually want any deviation from the free-market
policies pursued by Mbeki. After all, Zuma was vice president
throughout the period after the end of Apartheid, when the ANC
made clear it would follow IMF prescriptions.
The trade union bureaucracy and the SACP regularly denounce
Mugabe and back the MDCand have been banned from entering
Zimbabwe.
Whatever their disagreements about how Zimbabwe is ruled, none
of the factions in the ANC have made any criticism of the way
Zimbabwean refugees are brutally treated by the South African
police and are regularly deported back to their country. Earlier
this year the police raided Johannesburgs Methodist Mission
that houses Zimbabwean refugees, beat several of the residents
and carted some 300 of them to jail.
None of the mainstream political parties, or factions of them,
have any perspective for the mass of the population in Southern
Africa, whose social conditions are deteriorating daily. The situation
in Zimbabwe is only the most acute expression of the situation
across the region. The political elite has enriched itself massively
at the expense of the majority. The conflict between Mugabe and
the MDC or between Zuma and Mbeki is in large part about who has
the right to enjoy the material benefits that flow from political
power.
See Also:
Zimbabwe: Mugabe government
responds to mass opposition with repression
[11 April 2008]
Zumas election
heralds instability
[22 December 2007]
South Africa: conflict
in ANC signals deepening social tensions
[22 December 2007]
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