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Archive for the 'Elections 2008' Category

Judges and fudges

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by Bev Clark

Philip Barclay from the British Embassy has been blogging again – he’s recommended reading. Here’s an excerpt, and if you want the full blog click here

There’s a right way and a wrong way to approach a cordon of Zimbabwean riot police. It’s not clever for example to don an MDC t-shirt and ask the plod for the results of the Presidential election.

I usually try and carry it off with a self-confident swagger, as if a line of big cops in crash helmets and heavy boots carrying nasty sticks is an everyday hurdle. I try to look like a man who has proper business in Zimbabwe’s High Court, rather than what the state media portrays me as: a colonialist who is sabotaging Zimbabwe’s economy because he wants to restore white supremacism. As I reach the thick blue line I manage a cheerful:

“Good morning! How are you sirs?”,

in the Zimbabwean style.

Dictators don’t tend to lose elections voluntarily

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by Amanda Atwood

While the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission drags its heels, and the MDC turns to the courts and the international community, a headline caught my eye: Only mass mobilisation can defeat the Mugabe dictatorship.

At last, I thought to myself.

In it, the International Socialist Organisation makes a few important points:

1) Zanu PF will remain in power by hook or by crook, unless otherwise compelled by mass mobilisation.

2) The people’s power route is only possible if there is “the urgent establishment of a united and democratic front of the commons and democrats, including organised labour, residents, informal traders, youths, students, women, progressive civic groups, socialists and other radicals.

3) The behaviour of the regime in refusing to announce the election results has more than vindicated the position of those who said that without a democratic constitution and mass mobilisation, the March election would not deliver change.

4) The MDC’s boycotting of the run-off, would be commendable, but is suspect in the circumstances. Instead of mobilising the masses who have overwhelmingly voted for it, … the MDC(T) has focused on calling for so-called “international community” intervention – code words for the Western countries – and sending its leaders on futile regional/international “diplomatic offensives”. Most damning, it is pacifying its members and civic groups by calling for restraint and not doing anything to provoke the regime. The MDC(T) is again going to Mugabe’s courts for relief, giving the regime cover to draw out the dispute and consolidate its positions.

The ISO recommends the mobilisation of mass resistance to electoral fraud, “starting with less confrontational methods that build confidence, such as pressure on the ZEC members to resign, especially those seconded by the opposition, regular mass prayer meetings, cascading into stayaways and general strikes and demonstrations.”

Now we’re talking.

Watch this film

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by Bev Clark

I’ve been reading a news article in which the Mugabe regime asserts that the MDC is drawing attention to post election violence as a “ploy” for international intervention. Meanwhile the BBC has just published a short film about victims of state violence in Zimbabwe. I wonder whether Morgan Tsvangirai might challenge Zimbabwe’s Minister of Health and Child Welfare, Dr David Parirenyatwa to tour Harare’s hospitals to see and hear the gruesome stories of assault and brutality. Tsvangirai’s visit to supporters who have been beaten and who are recovering in hospital is long overdue. But if Ban Ki-moon comes first, then let’s at least see Someone from the MDC rallying hope in the hospital wards.

Daring to want a different government

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by Natasha Msonza

In response to my last blog, somebody going by the name DA Mal raised some very interesting and relevant points. He/she wrote: “… what, exactly, do democratic Zimbabweans expect South Africa to do? Thabo Mbeki is right about one thing – it’s your country, and in the end getting rid of your dictator must be your solution. Every thinking South African agrees that we are not doing enough to help you. But, if we were to offer genuine, unalloyed and uncompromised help, such as JZ (Jacob Zuma) might likely offer, then what would you want from us?”

Well, I’m sure Da Mal is not the only one who fails to see exactly what Mbeki, or the rest of SADC, including its ordinary citizens can do, and must do. My first point would be to say that if there really wasn’t anything anyone could do, then what would be the point of appointing a mediator in the first place? What did former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan do for the crisis in Kenya? I hasten to add, that as much as this problem is ours and this is our country, the effects of whatever goes on here may also be felt regionally. Moreover, I believe that a call for help is not a sign of weakness, but of courage. Zimbabweans live under the iron fist of a practically untouchable dictator who moves around in the company of a kilometer long armed motorcade. They also risk being shot dead for coming within the 10-meter perimeter of state house. They live in constant and real fear of losing their lives because unlike other places, here the respect for the right to life is in short supply. They have seen footage of police bashing in the heads of dissenters with baton sticks. They have witnessed peaceful protesters like the WOZA women beaten thoroughly in places normal people would hesitate to hit a woman. Some people have died mysteriously or just disappeared. Can Zimbabweans then be blamed for fearing for their lives?

In short, there is a hell of a lot Mbeki, or our neighbors can do. For instance, we applaud the move by members of SATAWU and the South African naval intelligence for resisting and blocking the entry of the arms reportedly en route to Zimbabwe aboard a Chinese ship. Some sensible people realized the arms were headed into a peaceful country full of defenseless people who were just going to be annihilated simply for daring to want a different government. We are grateful for that. Should the arms arrive somehow, (which is very likely to happen thanks to Mugabe’s loyal friends in SADC), at least SA should be proud for having done the right thing.

Another thing Mbeki, SA or the rest of SADC can do is make it difficult for these big chefs to enter their countries. Hit them with another wave of sanctions; ‘local’ ones this time around. A few colleagues also feel that South African can be a little more tolerant of Zimbabwean refugees. The reports of serious xenophobia down south are distressing. It may help for our neighbors to remember that this can easily happen to them also, and they’d have to depend on others for mere survival.

Mr Mbeki could also be helpful by either keeping quiet and admitting he can’t handle it then step down, or if not, at least stop insulting people’s intelligence by misrepresenting the facts as they are. The man insists on describing his lack of action as diplomacy then has the nerve to say “loud diplomacy” is not diplomacy. Really? I thought the word diplomacy was a verb describing certain tact or artfulness intended to achieve something. What is quiet diplomacy anyway? Let me guess; wait and see? What is that intended to achieve?

If Annan could broker a deal that saw a semblance of peace descend on Kenya, then surely, talks conducted in the right way can achieve positive results? For a lot of people the question of what Mbeki can do, is out of question.

Dr Parirenyatwa, explain yourself

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by Amanda Atwood

Before the March 29 Election, my impression of Zimbabwe’s Minister of Health and Child Welfare, Dr. David Parirenyatwa was that he was among the more “reasonable” of mugabe’s ministers. He had a good reputation, and the people I knew who had been on committees or at conferences or meetings with him seemed to respect him.

But Parirenyatwa being depicted in the media seems a very different man. He is accused of being instrumental to a campaign of post-election, retaliatory violence in Murehwa.

Dr Parirenyatwa, I challenge you to read stories such as these, and explain yourself.

If you would like to contact Dr David Parirenyatwa and challenge him about these reports, you can reach him on the details below:

Ministry of Health and Child Welfare
Box CY 1122, Causeway, Harare, Zimbabwe
Tel: +263 4 730 111-9
Email: npro_moh@gta.gov.zw (Ministry’s National Public Relations Officer)

Father figures and lame duck leaders

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by James Hall

“It’s like a father, when the father is away, children always ask, ‘Where is the father,’ but father may make an assessment that it is not opportune at that particular time to do certain things,” he said.

A father’s place is at home President Tsvangirai and so is a leader’s. Morgan Tsvangirai is quoted as having said the above by a Canadian newspaper. There was a time when Nelson Mandela was in Algeria on his way to London in the early years of the struggle. He had one more trip to do to London and his colleagues and friends, worried at what would happen to him were he to return to South Africa, urged him to ask for asylum in Britain. His response was typical Mandela arguing, that a leader’s place is with his people.

President Tsvangirai, the people who worked, campaigned and risked life and limb for you to make it to State House are being hunted down and swatted like mosquitoes. Their blood is staining the walls of Great Zimbabwe. The leadership of the MDC is nowhere in sight. One of the values of a social democratic society is solidarity with the poor and oppressed. This is an opportune time to demonstrate the courage that has won you much deserved respect the world over and that led the masses to vote for you. Do not let them down now when they need their leader.

The attempted analogy with the father is most unfortunate because many a father would not abandon their children to such a fate. Come home and stand with us as we continue to stand with you. As we did on March 11 and as we will continue to do . . . if you show the leadership and courage of Nelson Mandela. This is not the time to be shuttling the region, it is a time to be shutting Zimbabwe down. In fact, if you get arrested as you fear, such action will achieve larger results for you than the current shuttle diplomacy in some capital cities that are hostile to you.