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Western powers dispute Mugabes victory in Zimbabwe poll
By Chris Talbot
13 April 2005
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The ruling ZANU-PF Party of President Robert Mugabe increased
its share of parliamentary seats in elections held last week that
were widely condemned in the West as rigged. ZANU-PF won 78 seats
out of a possible 120, whereas the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) won only 41 seats17 fewer than it won in 2000.
Criticism in the Western media focused on the refusal of Zimbabwes
government to allow international observers from the European
Union and the Commonwealth to monitor the poll. Observers from
the African Union, South Africa and other southern African countries
claimed that the elections were free and credible,
and voting apparently proceeded without much violence, unlike
elections in 2000 and 2002.
The largest group of election observers, from the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), rejected the conclusion of southern
African observers and pointed to a climate of fear
over a long period before the poll. They cited rural areas hit
by drought where government food aid was used to gain votes, as
well as no-go areas where opposition parties were kept out. However,
they welcomed the predominantly peaceful conditions on polling
day and the reduced violence in the immediate run-up to the election.
The Western powers dismissed the election, with US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice claiming they were heavily tilted
in the governments favour, and British Foreign Secretary
Jack Straw condemning them as seriously flawed.
The intention of the US and Britain is to step up their pressure
on a regime that Rice has called an outpost of tyranny.
Rices list of complaints against Mugabe, including muzzling
the press and constraining freedom of assembly, are applied very
selectively. They could just as easily be directed against countries
that meet US approvalfrom Nigeria to Pakistanand certainly
to the recent elections in Iraq, which were conducted under conditions
of military occupation.
Whatever the degree of election fraud, it cannot by itself
explain the continuing decline of the MDC, the party the West
has backed to replace Mugabe and ZANU-PF. The MDC has failed to
make headway since it received a wave of popular support in the
late 1990s. The call by the archbishop of Bulawayo for a Ukrainian-style
peaceful mass uprising against the government received
no response.
To some extent, the MDCs decline can be attributed to
inept political leadership. The British Independent newspaper,
normally favorable to the MDC, noted that the organisation is
in crisis following the elections. There have been calls for its
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, to resign. Last September, he called
for an election boycott, only to change his mind this February,
with the result that many MDC voters, especially in the rural
areas, failed to register.
However, a more important factor in the MDCs decline
is the partys policies and its open ties to Western imperialist
governments. As the Independent admits, the MDC has failed
to capitalise on spiraling inflation, widespread unemployment
and food shortages, under conditions in which the economy has
contracted by 30 percent since 2000. Some 3 million people have
emigrated from the country in recent years, and the decline in
food production in what was once a key agricultural economy in
southern Africa has resulted in large sections of the population
facing starvation and becoming dependent on aid.
The MDC has blamed the economic collapse on the ZANU-PF regime.
This is partly true. Mugabes land seizures have played a
part in the economic collapse because none of the inputs and infrastructure
needed for successful agricultural production were provided by
the cash-strapped government. Some small farmers and landless
peasants have received plots of land, but much of it has gone
to wealthy government supporters.
Mugabe claimed a bumper harvest last year and demanded that
international food donors halt feeding programmes. The reality,
even according to the state-run Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment
Committee (ZimVAC), is that at least 3.3 million of the rural
population were unable to obtain the food they needed between
December 2004 and March 2005.
But the MDC has nothing progressive to offer as an alternative
for the rural poor and landless, or the vast numbers of poor and
unemployed workers in the cities. Its manifesto is shaped entirely
in the interests of the imperialist powers and international financial
institutions, whose domination of the world economy and exploitation
of its resources is fundamentally responsible for the continuing
backwardness and underdevelopment of Zimbabwe.
The MDCs commitment to International Monetary Fund-style
sound fiscal and monetary policies will please international
financiers and Western governments but provides no basis for carrying
out its promised relief to poor farmers and the unemployed. According
to the Independent, Its open door approach to international
financial institutions, such as the IMF and World Bank, did not
play well with an electorate that has painful memories of the
structural adjustment of the 1990s.
The MDC is advocating the same free market policies
that Mugabe followed in the 1990s, and which gave rise to a growing
number of strikes and protest movements. Mugabe was forced to
halt the IMF programme, as he risked undermining his system of
patronage in ZANU-PF if he carried through the drastic cuts in
state expenditure demanded. It was because of this shift that
Mugabe went from being highly regarded by Britain and the US in
the 1980s and early 1990s, for having agreed to end the armed
struggle against the white supremacist regime in 1979, to his
present pariah status.
Today, the overtly pro-imperialist policies of the MDC alienate
vast swathes of workers and poor peasants, and allow Mugabe to
adopt an anti-colonialist posture, portraying his government as
the defender of Zimbabwe against Western-backed stooges. This
carries some weight amongst sections of voters.
The MDC was formed by trade union bureaucrats, businessmen
and academics, who sought thereby to both exploit and channel
the wave of protest that erupted before the 2000 elections. The
new party focused on Mugabes authoritarian rule. But its
underlying pro-Western economic policies, its funding by wealthy
white farmers, and its support from institutions like the Friedrich
Ebert Institute are now widely known.
It is this, combined with Mugabes ability to maintain
control of ZANU-PF, the army and security forcesno dissident
grouping within his party feels it can risk association with an
overtly pro-Western movement like the MDCthat has encouraged
the South African ANC government to back Mugabes continued
rule.
As the South African newspaper Business Day explains,
President Mbekis policy of quiet diplomacy towards
Zimbabwe relates directly to the consideration that an MDC
government would not have the means to control the army, the police
and the all-powerful Central Intelligence Organisation .... [This]
would create instability right on our northern border.
Nevertheless, Mugabes grip on ZANU-PF is increasingly
unstable, and his base of support is growing ever narrower. Last
December, Mugabes information minister, Professor Jonathan
Moyothe man whose responsibility was to suppress all opposition
presswas sacked and accused of organising a coup.
Moyo had called a meeting to organise support for Emmerson
Mnangagwa as vice-president of ZANU-PF, and hence successor to
Mugabe. Mnangagwa, formerly Mugabes closest aide, was responsible
for the repression in the Matabeleland region in the 1980s that
killed tens of thousands. He is supported by big business and
has some support in South Africa. Moyo stood as an independent
in the election and was voted back in, so he presumably will continue
to build up opposition to Mugabe.
In removing all potential opponents in ZANU-PF, Mugabe has
given all top jobs to one clan groupinga break from the
previous policy of balancing the various clan factions. This is
likely to exacerbate rivalries and internal conflicts.
See Also:
Pakistan and Zimbabwe:
a tale of two autocrats
[26 May 2004]
Correspondence on Zimbabwe
[21 January 2004]
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