Mugabe Versus The MDC. Zimbabwe Awaits Second Results.

May 6th, 2008

Finally a tyrant is brought into the 21st century, if kicking and screaming. President Robert Mugabe’s rein of terror looks at an end at last as Mr Morgan Tsvangirai challenged the president’s choice to refuse an announcement of election results until there had been a recount. There is now to be a re-run of the presidential poll and good luck to the Movement of Democratic Choice that they make it out of this second one alive.

Mr Nqobizitha Mlilo, spokesman for the MDC, said ‘it is quite obvious we won this election hands down’, as the president refuses to admit he is being ousted after 28 long years of suffering for Zimbabwe. Almost a modern day Hitler it is widely known of his special police hunting white framers and killing any opposition from the people, black or white.

Now the public can see he is scared, and if he doesn’t step down now he will surely be dragged from power and charged with genocide. With the ‘worsening violence’ hopefully coming to an end as the country has the re-run the possibility that a kinder man will be seated at the reins of one of Africa’s most beautiful but troubled contries is uncertain.

Mr Tsvangirai, thankfully, is no dunce. After the trouble with releasing the results became public he quickly took refuge in Zimbabwe’s neighbouring country, the peaceful Botswana. Never has there been two more juxtaposing countries to share a border.

With leaders the world over including UK Prime Minister Brown advising Mugabe to step down only to receive abusive speeches in return it will be a relief globally when he is finally out.

Because the MDC have not won outright if Mugabe will not step down it will mean his party, ZANU PF, attempting to run the country with an opposition-controlled parliament. Yet more instability for a country already on its knees.

The only question now is whether Tsvangirai can win the run off. With Mugabe’s former finance minsiter Simba Makoni behind him as well it must be possible. The MDC must be praying the country does not suffer yet more violence as they make plans to see the run-off though.

(Source)


Zim Finally Releases Poll Results

May 2nd, 2008

Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has won the first round of a presidential election against Robert Mugabe with 47.9% of the vote, an election official said on Friday.

Mugabe won 43.2% of the vote and, since neither candidate won more than 50%, a second round run-off will have to be held, Lovemore Sekeramayi, chief elections officer, told reporters in Harare.

“Since no candidate has received the majority of the valid vote cast… a second election shall be held on a date to be advised by the commission,” he said, referring to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission.

Under Zimbabwe election law, the run-off has to be held within 21 days after the announcement of the result.

Former finance minister Simba Makoni, widely expected to back Tsvangirai in any run-off, came third in the vote with 8.3%, Sekeramayi said.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change has claimed an outright victory over Mugabe in the March 29 election based on its own calculations and said ahead of the announcement that it would reject a result that showed otherwise.

Speaking before the announcement, Chris Mbanga, Tsvangirai’s representative at all-party talks hosted by the electoral commission in Harare, said the commission was not listening to the opposition.

“We have been denied the opportunity to verify the result and they’re going ahead to announce the original results and now we are taking the matter to our political leadership,” Mbanga said before leaving the meeting.

(Source)


Zim Ballot Boxes ‘Tampered With’

April 21st, 2008

The recount in a number of constituencies in Zimbabwe is futile because ballot boxes have been tampered with, says a South African member of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) observer team.

“From what I have seen and experienced in Zimbabwe over the past three days, it is clear that the process of recounting the contested wards from the recent elections is fatally flawed,” Democratic Alliance MP Dianne Kohler-Barnard said on Monday.

The process had been marred by delays, administrative problems and the clear political intent of blaming the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) for all the problems associated with the recount.

“Of particular concern was the evidence of ballot box tampering that I witnessed personally, which points to a concerted effort to rig the election results in order to bring about a Mugabe ‘victory’,” she said in a statement.

Broken seals on ballot boxes

Evidence supporting this view included repeated miscommunication of venue addresses, resulting in party agents and electoral observers frequently posted to the incorrect venue, thus undermining the observation process and contributing to further delays in the recount.

The protocol registers at several counting stations were missing, bringing counting to a halt in a number of areas, while on a number of ballot boxes, the seals holding the keys for the two padlocks on each box had been broken.

One set of ballot boxes was missing a book of voting papers from the presidential election box, although all the other books were locked inside.

A number of other boxes had broken or missing seals, missing keys, and no voting paper books inside.

Loose ballot box seals with serial numbers identical to those on already-sealed boxes were easily available, giving the impression that ballot box seals could easily be replicated, thus opening the way for large-scale vote tampering.

All of theses problems pointed to the fact that a number of ballot boxes had been tampered with, rendering the entire exercise of recounting the contested ballots a futile one, she said.

“Despite these many problems, a number of my colleagues on the SADC observer mission must be commended for the excellent work that they have done under often difficult circumstances.

“There is no doubt that the situation in Zimbabwe is at breaking point as anger over the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission’s failure to release the results of the presidential election escalates.

“In many instances it was thanks to the work of SADC observers that this anger did not boil over into violent confrontation,” Kohler-Barnard said.

(Source)


True Zimbabwean Election Results

April 17th, 2008

The following results (of the Zimbabwean Elections 2008) were obtained from the Independent Results Centre.

Presidential Elections 2008:

With 209 out of 210 constituencies reporting:

Morgan Tsvangerai [MDC]: 50.3%

Robert Mugabe [ZANU-PF]: 42.9%

Simba Makoni [MUT/IND]: 6.8%

Constituency Elections 2008:

Constituencies reporting: 206 [98%]

By Elections: 3

MDC: 48%

ZANU-PF: 46%

MUT/IND: 6%

House of Assembly 2008:

210 seats

MDC: 99

ZANU-PF: 95

MUT/IND: 12

Registered Voters:

Bulawayo : 313,479

Harare: 678,682

Manicaland: 703,399

Mashonaland Central: 491,481

Mashonaland East: 624,631

Mashonaland West: 582,979

Masvingo: 699,202

Matabeleland North: 342,423

Matabeleland South: 342,552

Midlands: 736,736

TOTAL: 5,605,204

(Source)


At His Most Disingenuous

April 13th, 2008

Can you believe these guys! Mr. Mbeki flies into Harare where inflation is raging at 500 000 percent. The wife of the President has fled with enough foreign exchange to feed the whole country for 6 months, an election has been held under totally unacceptable conditions. The results - legally due in 6 days, are 14 days over due. The incumbent has illegally appointed a government, holds onto power and deployed the army to maintain his grip on the populace. He has ordered illegal and unconstitutional activities. The economy is at a standstill, a national strike is threatened, there is no food in the stores and what is available is at unaffordable prices. Yet Mr. Mbeki climbs down from his luxury executive jet in Harare, embraces Mugabe and declares, “There is no crisis”.

How difficult is it to tabulate 9400 V11 forms and get a result? Would that take any group of children more than a day? Those forms are the only basis on which these elections can be determined. They are all in Harare and the result of the count and recount is available - has been available for two weeks. “The results are too sensitive to release,” says the ZEC. Why,
because, they show that Mugabe has been soundly thrashed and his main opponent has got more than 50 per cent of the vote.

Then onto Lusaka where 13 regional leaders have gathered for an emergency summit to discuss the situation in Zimbabwe “where there is no crisis!”.

They debate the situation for several hours - late into the night. Then issue a communiqué that declares that ZEC must release the results expeditiously. The illegal regime in Harare promptly announced they would defy the region, hold up the announcement until they had recounted 23 constituencies next Saturday.

In the meantime here in Harare MDC went to Court to demand that the illegal recounts ordered by the regime and due to take place yesterday, be suspended pending our application to the Courts to the effect that the act is illegal and unconstitutional. The Court agreed and stopped all the recounts. Even so they went ahead in Bikita and duly announce that the new count showed, surprise, surprise that a MDC victory had been overturned and that ZANU PF had won!

Remember we have been excluded from the counting of the V11 forms for the presidency; ZEC has barred all independent observers and even moved the whole operation to a secret “high security” venue. They have had the ballot boxes under their control for 14 days, rumors are flying that they have printed ballots with the same numbers on them as those used in the original election, they have also contacted a number of the returning officers who have been intimidated and even arrested. They are perfectly capable of falsifying the V11 forms and the ballots themselves.

Under these conditions a recount is a complete farce. One interesting feature of the statement by the regime in Harare yesterday was that it was only the presidential ballot that would be recounted in 23 constituencies. Originally they listed 25 constituencies - no explanation of the differential. Does this mean they are going to allow the parliamentary vote and the local government votes to stand as they are?

They are committed to a re-run in 21 days after the final result is announced. That will be on the 10th May - six weeks after the first election. Six weeks of turmoil and mayhem simply because an old man and his cohorts will not obey their own rules and constitution and leave office in an orderly and peaceful way. All the rules of the SADC for this sort of thing are being violated and blatantly so in front of the whole world. But then Kibaki stole the Presidential election in Kenya and has been allowed by the international community and Africa to get away with it.

Our own position at present is that we will not accept a re-run. But what is the alternative? To go onto the streets and fight for our rights? The illegal regime in Harare holds all the guns and levers of control. Does blood have to spill to bring the UN into the situation; do principle and the rule of law matter to nobody but us?

We always knew that the solution to this crisis was in our hands and that the international community simply would not interfere or intervene unless we started killing each other. The regional leaders who have the power to influence the regime in Harare and who established mechanisms for just such an eventuality have once again failed us. South Africa under present leadership is inept and compliant.

So what do we do? We may simply have to bite the bullet and accept a re-run.

What if they recount 23 constituencies and hey presto! Produce a victory for Mugabe! Then we have real problems because then we have no alternative but to fight for our rights and a bloody and extended conflict will ensue that will draw in the UN and the international community and finally destroy what is left of this benighted country.

If they compromise and do force a re-run, then the very least that the region can do is deliver reasonable conditions - stop the present wave of violence and intimidation that is regime managed and funded, order independent observers into the country to monitor the election and ensure that ZEC is allowed to do its job properly, professionally and without interference or coercion.

On our side, we would have to struggle on trying to survive the next few weeks and get our people ready. We would have to train and deploy up to 20000 polling agents and make sure they were in position at every polling station without exception. That will take money, real money and at least 1000 volunteers with vehicles and communications equipment. But we can do that and then deliver a final blow to this regime from which they simply cannot recover and then, we can get on with the task ahead of us.

Perhaps we need to do this even though it seems unthinkable at this stage - and then get final closure on this shameful episode. Its clear, Africa has a long way to go before it can say it observes democratic practices and principles despite all the high sounding rhetoric.

Eddie Cross
Bulawayo, 13th April 2008


MDC Security Update

April 12th, 2008

Incident update - pre and post elections.

Mashonaland (Raffingora) - 2/3/08 – PM returned from an MDC meeting and found his wife had been abducted by ZANU PF youths from Peath Farm. Soon after, a group of about 60 ZANU PF youths surrounded his house and took him to where his wife was. He was forced to sing revolutionary songs and chant ZANU PF slogans. He was beaten with logs and told to leave the farm. He refused to leave so the youths burnt his property.

Mashonaland East (Mutoko) - 15/3/08 - LT walking to an MDC rally, dropped his membership card at Majaira Homestead. People started assaulting him, accusing him of being an MDC member. Beaten with fists and kicked with booted feet.

Midlands (Redcliff, Kwe Kwe) - 16/3/08 - LC part of group protecting President Tsvangirai. Some youth rabble rousers started to go towards the President. In the ensuing scuffle client assaulted with stone, hands and feet.

Mashonaland Central (Bindura) - JM - beaten by four ZANU PF youth for wearing an MDC T Shirt on 22/3/08.

Harare (Warren Park) - 25/3 - Activist putting up posters. Police chased him at night. Fell and sustained injuries.

Manicaland (Chipinge) - 26/3 - assaulted by Support unit - MS Kambuzuma, Section 5 Harare. Occurred in Chipinge, Goko area at MDC rally. Police accused MDC of gathering to provoke ZANU PF supporters.

Mashonaland East (Mudzi West) - SC aspiring candidate - unlawfully arrested by neighborhood watch police on 27/3/08 under instruction of ZANU PF candidate. Abducted and taken in ZANU PF candidate’s vehicle, together with ZANU PF and CIO and forced to withdraw nomination.

Mashonaland West (Zvimba North) - PM reports being attacked on 30th March, 2008 by ZANU PF youth, with knives and sticks. It happened after the winning of their MDC counselor, Mr Abraham Shiri from Ward 15. The ZANU PF youth said the MDC member must die. Managed to escape having been stabbed and beaten. Sought medical attention at Mutoroshanga Hospital, then moved to Bindura Hospital for four days.

Harare (Avondale West) - 28/3/08 - SC plus 5 others educating on voting process and had political music playing in their car. Police told them to stop so they turned down music. A short while later 3 trucks arrived, arrested the group, taken to Harare Central Police Station and assaulted mainly on their heads, and also their bodies. They were kept in custody till 31/3/08 then taken to court. Case pending.

Epworth - 28/3/08 - KK putting up Tsvangirai posters and painting on walls when attacked by 5 ZANU PF youths who beat him with clenched fists. He was then taken to their base at Reuben’s shops and assaulted on the back and buttocks with batons. He fell to the ground and one of the Police Officers stamped on his right eye. He was kept in custody till 4th April, 2008, then fined 150 million dollars.

Mashonaland East (Marondera West) - MT - 30/3/08 - Arrested for passing through Chief Samuriwo’s homestead area with MDC T shirts - taken into a room at Chief’s house and beaten with sticks then militia and ZANU PF took him to Mahusekwa Police Station in a white car. He was told he was guilty of provocation and made to pay a fine.

Epworth - 30/3/08 - LN is an MDC activist in Dombo, Epworth. She was celebrating victory of MDC councilors. At 1am she was woken at her home by 10 ZANU PF supporters and taken away in a truck to Muza Shops, where she was assaulted with whips and clenched fists. She was then dragged on the tar road. She has left her home.

Kariba - 31/3/08 - SB vice Chair of MDC (T) distributing party regalia on 28th March. On 31st March at 2200 hours he was woken up and on opening his door, was hit in the face, then forced into the bush and assaulted with fists and booted feet.

Mashonaland Central (Mt Darwin North) - CM - 2/4/08 - assaulted.

Mashonaland East (Mudzi) - BZ - beaten by ZANU PF youth with sticks and stones saying “You must die because you are a traitor and all land should be taken from you and your parents”.

Chitingwiza (Seke) - MS, CS, PK, EM, DN, CW, FK, CT, NP, KA, NH – ZANU PF held a meeting on 7/4/08 on Danluce Farm at 5pm. This was addressed by ZANU PF Matsangura Choga, Mai Chiremba and Phinias Chihota. Key objective of meeting was to strategise on how to attack MDC Tsvangirai election polling agents. Abductions took place on York Farm owned by Mr Miller who is under house arrest. MS and others were abducted by ZANU PF youth with weapons and a security guard also with a firearm. They alleged that they were MDC polling agents and were verbally abused and threatened. Managed to run away. Farm house windows were smashed.

Muzarabani South - 2/4/08 - Polling agent ND (Teacher) Chaona resettlement Muzarabani South assaulted by Police while trying to extract him from the polling station.

Epworth - 4/4/08 - AC assaulted by 2 ZANU PF activists Epworth constituency.

Harare (Mabvuku) - 4/4/08 - DC celebrating with other MDC supporters, approached by 8 Police officers in uniform and accused of causing trouble. Three of them taken to Mabvuku Police station where they were assaulted with batons and kicked.

Harare (Glen View) - BM returning home from command center at 2200 with two colleagues. As they left the omnibus they were approached by about 6 men (suspected ZANU PF youth) and assaulted with iron bars.

Dzvirasekwa - 4/4/08 - DN and FB injured while running away from Police. Part of group at Dzvirasekwa celebrating constituency win.

Dema Growth Point - 4/4/08 - SZ reports he was the losing candidate for Ward 2 Seke for MDC (T). When he was walking home at about 7.30pm he was approached by two men and hit with a wooden log. He shouted for help and the men ran away. He had previously received threats from ZANU PF.

Manicaland (Rusape) - 5/4/08 - EZ - sitting with friends at a pub in Rusape discussing election outcome. ZANU PF supporters were sitting nearby. When EZ went to the toilet he was approached by one ZANU PF youth who warned him against discussing election results. He queried the warning and was then head butted, and hit with an empty bottle, then kicked when he fell to the ground.

Epworth - 5/4/08 - TN approached by 3 ZANU PF youth and asked why he had assisted in another MDC activists release from the cells. He was then assaulted with clenched fists on the chest and neck.

Kambazuma - 7/4/08 - LT assaulted.

Mutoko - 7/4/08 - TT (Harare East) beaten by ZANU PF youth.

Mutoko - 7/4/08 - LC beaten by ZANU PF youth.

Mashonaland East (Marondera West) 7/4/08 - MT (beaten on feet/falanga) KC and M. All beaten by ZANU PF youth.

Mashonaland East (Macheke) - 8/4/08 - OM and FM (MDC T office bearers) were both beaten extensively with whips across their backs and sides by militia under the command of the local ZANU PF councilor, Mutizwa, for supporting MDC. Both admitted to Hospital.

Mashonaland East (Macheke) - 8/4/08 - two MDC office bearers houses burned down, but suspected militia.

Mashonaland East (Macheke) - 10/4/08 - more houses being burned as report being written (1430 hours).

Other:

Mt Darwin South, militia into base camp. Forcing people to “rallies” telling them (while wielding AK’s) that there will be a re run of Pres election - “one ballot paper for MDC and you are done and you suffer”.

Mudzi South - MK (aspiring MDC candidate) reported today Tuesday - On Monday 7th at Kotwa growth point 5 brand new Mazda 1 ton pick-ups with civilian number plates arrived - 1 truck filled with mattresses, the others with youth and “war veterans” in civilian clothing. 8 of the youth had AK 47’s and forced everyone to a rally, even passengers who had boarded buses. (A local CID officer recognized the leader of the war vet group as an Assistant Commissioner in the ZRP!). Everyone was made to chant ZANU PF slogans, and those who didn’t/couldn’t were slapped. The AK’s were cocked and brandished in the air and the gathering was told “there will be a re-run for the Presidential election and if you try and vote for MDC again like you did before, we will go to war. We are not asking you to vote ZANU PF, we are ordering you”. They then asked for any MDC people to be identified. No one said a word. (From the analysis of that area, quite a few ZANU PF MPs were voted back in, but the majority voted for MT as President).

This group then moved to Nyamuyazoka GP - same scene.

Then to Nyamapanda border post GP. Even truck drivers were forced to attend the “rally”.

2 plain clothes policemen showed their ID’s saying we are cops and were told to get away and sit with the rest of them. Some assault victims from this rally tried to report to Police Nyamapanda but their reports were not accepted.

Please note: the above mentioned incidents are only the reported cases. There is no doubt that massive intimidation is taking place daily across the country.

A daily update will be sent out following on from the last entry.

MDC Welfare.

(Source: via email)


Embattled Mugabe Resorts to Violence, Intimidation

April 9th, 2008

Foreign journalists and rights activists were detained last week and offices of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party were ransacked, ominous signs that President Robert Mugabe will engage in a post-election crackdown in trying to avert threats to his 28-year rule, say the Media Institute for Southern Africa (MISA) and other IFEX members.

Heavily armed riot police surrounded and entered the York Lodge, a Harare hotel popular with foreign correspondents, and arrested five people on 3 April.

“The New York Times” correspondent Barry Bearak, winner of a 2002 Pulitzer Prize, and a freelance journalist from the U.K. were arrested and charged with practising journalism without accreditation, report MISA, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and other IFEX members. The three others, who were not identified, were later released. Bearak and the British journalist were released on 300 million Zimbabwean Dollars bail (US$10,000) after spending five days in detention, says CPJ. Bearak is due to appear in court on 10 April.

According to the Associated Press, Adrienne Arsenault, a reporter for Canada’s CBC Newsworld, said she was standing in the driveway of a different hotel earlier on 3 April and was grabbed by riot police. She was taken to a Harare police station but eventually released. The hotel had warned her that police were ordered to be on the lookout for journalists, she said.

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) says the arrest of journalists is an attempt to sabotage media coverage of the current political crisis and a possible runoff election.

On the same evening police raided offices of the opposition party Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in another Harare hotel. MDC secretary general Tendai Biti told the Associated Press, “Mugabe has started a crackdown. It is quite clear he has unleashed a war.”

The police raids came a day after official results showed Mugabe’s party had lost control of parliament’s 210-member lower house.

“We fear this is the prelude to a government crackdown on the political opposition and civil society in the wake of hotly contested elections,” says Human Rights Watch. “Government harassment of the opposition and journalists only serve to inflame the political environment in Zimbabwe.”

Zimbabwe’s restrictive journalist accreditation law, the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, has been used to block international and local reporters from covering the elections. Even two South African broadcast engineers - not journalists - were arrested and accused of practising journalism without accreditation, MISA reports. Only a handful of foreign journalists received accreditation despite 300 requests, says CPJ, and despite the act being amended earlier this year to remove restrictions, says MISA.

In the months leading up to the presidential, parliamentary, senatorial, and local council elections on 29 March, the government cracked down on local and national journalists, shutting down newspapers and allowing members of Mugabe’s political party to harass and attack journalists with impunity.

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has yet to release results of the presidential election despite increasing international pressure. MDC already asserted its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, won the presidency outright, but said it was prepared to compete in any runoff.

(Source)


Tsvangirai In Court Appeal

April 6th, 2008

The Zimbabwe opposition party is pressing ahead with a legal bid to have the results of elections published after Robert Mugabe demanded a recount.

The Movement for Democratic Change, which claims to have won the poll, says it will not accept a recount and does not want a run-off election.

Its leader Morgan Tsvangirai has now taken the matter to the country’s high court, which is expected to rule today.

(Source)

Comment: Why is it that is the MDC make an appeal at High Court, it makes headline news, but Mugabe queries the counting of 16 parliamentary constituent seats, very little space is given to him?

I am not suggesting that we shoulf give me webspace to Mugabe - but it is apparent that court tussles are what Mugabe does without thinking, are the norm - and with the Judiciary under his influence, are in the bag…


VINDICATED!

April 3rd, 2008

vindicate - 1. to clear of accusation, blame suspicion, or doubt with supporting arguments or proof. 2. to justify or support. 3. to justify or prove the worth of, especially in the light of later developments.

Since 1999, the official opposition party within Zimbabwean politics has been on the receiving end of endless events in that country. Them - and many accidental observers and members of other bodies. We all watched as Mugabe’s ZANU PF rigged the elections in 2002 and 2005, and the Movement for Democratic Change took much of the blame for those losses.

Incorrectly, as it proved, since various court wrangles not only cleared the party, but in 2005 it is believed that Morgan Tsvangirai, the party’s leader, actually won the Presidential race, but was denied a re-run as the courts decided that because Mugabe had already taken office, they lacked the power to reverse it.

Then came the acrimonious split within the opposition party, which quickly turned very nasty. This was caused by a difference in opinion over whether the party should participate in the Senate election.

The breakaway faction, soon to be led by the parachuted in Arthur Mutambara, a former student firebrand and NASA rocket scientist, spent much of their initial few months arguing with the larger faction.

There was also talk about them commandeering the party name and logo, but in time much of this calmed down as the real aim of the party was thrust once again into the spotlight.

Who can forget the beating that the MDC-Tsvangirai faction took at the hands of the ZANU PF sponsored ZRP, army, war veterans and youth militia last March? Who can forget the heartbreaking photographs of Morgan Tsvangirai, Sekai Holland and Grace Kwinje lying in hospital nursing their wounds?

And they were joined within days by their faction spokesman, Nelson Chamisa, who was set upon, in broad daylight, by ZANU PF thugs at Harare International Airport.

During the majority of 2007, the two factions of the MDC were tied up in ‘mediated’ talks with Mugabe’s ZANU PF, overseen by South Africa’s President, Thabo Mbeki.

Ten months of sustained negotiation - sustained? - ZANU PF refused to attend most of the sessions, and dug their heels in on any compromises to their rule - and the small victories by the MDC factions were very quickly negated by Mugabe who just used Presidential decrees to cancel the advances out.

The South African President, given the mandate to mediate the talks by the South African Development Community (SADC), spent most of the year delegating his responsibility to his underlings and reporting to SADC that the talks were ‘on course’, ‘in progress’ and that a breakthrough was imminent.

Obviously Mugabe’s influence over the South African President was in play then.

And his influence throughout the immediate region has also been noted, with many of the area’s leaders lauding the praise of Mugabe. Indeed, at a SADC meeting in Lusaka, Mugabe was applauded onto the stage by the regional leaders.

But if leadership within the region is one thing, then leadership within a country is another.

For 28 years the people of Zimbabwe have had no choice but to watch Mugabe begin to dismantle and destroy the economy which he inherited from Ian Smith’s Rhodesian government.

Few people had ever dreamed that the opposition party, just 9 years old, and battle-scarred and bruised, would ever displace and dethrone Mugabe.

But dogged determination, which epitomises everything that their leadership has been through since the party’s inception, has been what has carried them through.

Whilst many of their original supporters may have jumped ship or returned to the loving arms of Mugabe’s ZANU PF, more people were beginning the realise that Mugabe’s remaining in control was just going to guarantee a long and lingering death.

And the watching world did precisely that - they watched… Afraid to say a word of criticism against Mugabe or his government, for fear that he may say something scathing back.

The people of Zimbabwe were made to pay the price for that silence.

Three main assaults on the population spring to mind, and I believe that it is these, together with disjointed, impersonal government, that has precipitated the fall of Mugabe. As Roy Bennett stated on his recent interview with SW Radio Africa’s Violet Gonda, the Presidency is for the incumbent to lose, not for an outsider to win.

And Mugabe lost the Presidency as long ago as the 1980’s - he has just been able to hang onto power through all manner and means at his disposal - and has added insult to injury by perpetrating agony after agony on ‘his’ people - people which he lost touch with in the first few years of his reign.

First was the Gukurahundi - the massacre of between 20 to 30 thousand Ndebele people in Matabeleland and the Midlands. Mugabe made the excuse that it was to put the Ndebele people in their place, but in reality it was his way of smashing the hold that Joshua Nkomo had over the Matabele tribe. The atrocities ended in 1987 after Mugabe and Nkomo signed an Accord to work together. Nkomo’s ZAPU was swallowed up by Mugabe’s ZANU.

The families that were affected by these heinous acts have never received any compensation for those atrocities, whilst the closest they have ever had by way of an apology was Mugabe admitting that the Gukurahundi was a ‘moment of madness’.

The second atrocity visited upon the population that springs to mind is the land grab. In 2000, Mugabe presented the population with a Constitution for acceptance or rejection. In a referendum, the new Constitution was soundly rejected.

In anger, Mugabe set the war veterans - the aging battle force that he had used to fight against the Rhodesian security forces in the 1970’s bush war - sometimes referred to as the chimurenga - on the commercial farms in the country, owned primarily by experienced and very productive white commercial farmers.

This was the beginning of the land redistribution programme which saw some white commercial farmers murdered and even more farm workers killed, injured and losing their jobs.

The land redistribution exercise was, to all intents and purposes, to return the land to the ‘landless’ blacks. Eight years later, only a handful of farms remain in the hands of the original commercial farmers, whilst the overwhelming majority of the land is in the hands of Mugabe and his loyalists in his regime - and officers in the army and the police… The land remains unworked and fallow, but Mugabe’s government uses the land as an excuse to spend money on farm equipment for the new ‘owners’ (which is not used for agriculture) and a system where the ‘farmers’ received discounted fuel, and the banks offer loans against the land whilst they continue to run the country into destitution.

The land grabs continue as I type.

The third example of the atrocities that Mugabe perpetrates against his people, is commonly called Operation Murambatsvina. Remove the rubbish. Take out the dirt.

Something in the region of 700000 people were effected by this demolition.

Mugabe decided that the opposition party was becoming too strong in the urban enclaves in the various cities and towns, and ordered the demolitions of all properties and dwellings that his government considered illegal.

Some unfortunate people died in the ’slum clearance’ and Mugabe refused to acknowledge his people’s heavy handedness, and chose to remain silent.

The economy began to deteriorate and today inflation is gauged at 100000% - the highest in the world outside a war zone.

The problem was that the world-at-large did not realise that within the borders of Zimbabwe is very similar to a war zone. The Mugabe government fought may a battle with many organisations and many institutions and these battles were waged with a ‘no prisoners’ policy.

Today, Mugabe finally lost the majority in parliament and we await the announcement that he has been dethroned from the top office of the land. And replaced by Morgan Tsvangirai.

Morgan Tsvangirai and his party, the Movement for Democratic Change, are on the rise - but we must be sure to emphasise to any protractor, that the fall of Mugabe’s government was enabled by DEMOCRATIC means. That was the MDC’s original intention, and they have not only risen to the challenge, but the party has achieved their target.

Let no one ever hoodwink the good people of Zimbabwe again.

We must be aware that power in Zimbabwe is ours to give - not to be taken from us - and that we must allow no government to ever build up the resources for personal use as Mugabe did.

Freedom in Zimbabwe is a paramount necessity. We owe it to our children, and to our children’s children. No one must be allowed to dictate to us again. No one.

Tsvangirai needs all of us to assist and help where we can - even if that help is only passing on information. Many of us will decide to go home, and again, we need to be aware that the country is in a poor state of repair and that rebuilding is the first priority. And that life will not magically improve overnight. And that the rebuilding will continue for many years - if not decades. It may take as many years to rebuild as it took to destroy.

Some of us may elect (forgive the pun) to remain in our adoptive lands - but we still remain - by default at least - Zimbabwean.

Zimbabweans: a truly democratic, well-meaning - often misunderstood people - people who love life, love people and are able to weather any storm.

My hearty congratulations to Morgan Tsvangirai and his party. And to the people of Zimbabwe who had the belief in their hearts and the hope of democracy to guide them in their vote. I am proud to be led by a man and a party that ‘does what it says on the tin’…

This afternoon I sit in front of my machine typing this, and the reality of the moment has not yet hit me. But it will and I may even break my aversion to alcohol (brought on by my necessary use of pain killing drugs) to celebrate. I will probably wait until victory is complete, and then I will happily drink to the best health of our President, his party and all God-fearing, like-minded Zimbabweans the world over.

The real struggle starts now…

Democracy loving Zimbabweans the world over must feel entirely vindicated.

Take care.

‘debvhu


Mugabe’s ZANU PF Loses Majority

April 2nd, 2008

President Robert Mugabe’s party has lost its majority in parliament, the Zimbabwe Election Commission says.

It says Mr Mugabe’s ZANU PF party has taken 94 of the 207 contested seats, while opposition parties have won 105. One seat has gone to an independent.

Although seven seats have yet to be declared, this means ZANU PF cannot win an overall majority.

The opposition MDC says its leader won the presidential election but official results have not yet been released.

(Source)


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