Open Letter to Mugabe – by Siphosami Malunga

SW Radio Africa – letter from Siphosami Malunga

Dear Mr. President

I read with utter dismay what was ascribed to be your comments relating to David Coltart and Roy Bennett as reported in the Herald of 5 September 2002. Those comments have motivated me to set the record straight and jolt your memory somewhat about the past. I have made this letter public because your comments were and it is necessary for the public to be made aware of the full facts.

Allow me to introduce myself. I am Siphosami Malunga, the second son and fourth child of the late Sidney Donald Malunga, M.P for Makokoba, who died in August 1994 and was declared a national hero by your government and buried at the National Heroes Acre. I am writing this letter from the newly independent Democratic Republic of East Timor where I am a trial attorney in the Special Panel for Serious Crimes which is entrusted with the responsibility over trials of persons (including civilian, military and political leaders) for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, violations of the laws and customs of war and other serious human rights abuses which occurred in East Timor between 1975 and 1999. It is work which I enjoy as its purpose is the achievement of justice in a post-tyrannical and post-dictatorial regime which targeted the civilian population for human rights abuse.

Lest your criticisms of David Coltart in particular be taken as gospel truth, I would like to highlight certain facts. You have labelled David Coltart and Roy Bennett as being British (as if that on its own were a sin). I will have you know that they were both born in Zimbabwe, Coltart in Gweru to be precise. According to Section 4 of our Constitution both are Zimbabwean. You were quoted as saying that Coltart and Bennett must leave Zimbabwe or else they would be imprisoned. I wish to remind you Mr. President that no matter how unpleasant you may regard the two parliamentarians and their views, you have no choice. They are Zimbabweans and therefore constitutionally guaranteed the right to live in Zimbabwe. This right is absolute. A citizen cannot be deported from his own country and it would be interesting to hear your reasons for your position if any.
That said, you are reported to have threatened Coltart and Bennett with imprisonment if they remain in Zimbabwe. I wish to draw to your attention Mr. President, to Section 13 of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, which guarantees every citizen the right against arbitrary deprivation of liberty. Any imprisonment of Coltart and Bennett simply on your arbitrary decree would be a violation of their Constitutionally guaranteed rights. I urge you to desist from this course of action. In doing so I reflect Mr. President on how imprisonment has been used by your government against perceived political opponents such as Coltart and Bennett in the past. Between 1982 and 1987 your government detained amongst other PF ZAPU leaders and ZIPRA commanders, Sidney Malunga- my father.

I am not authorised to speak in relation to others so I will limit myself to speaking of Sidney Malunga. At the time of his detention, you were Prime Minister of Zimbabwe and First Secretary of ZANU PF. The main reason for Malunga’s detention was that he was a vocal critic of government corruption, abuse of human rights and political persecution inter alia. It seems Mr. President, that imprisonment is still being used by your government as a political tool to suppress the legitimate voice of the opposition. Do you recall Mr. President how, your government used the same tactics currently employed against opposition supporters and leaders, how the police and the CIO raided the homes of PF ZAPU politicians, including my own home. The constant raids on the homes of MDC leaders including its President come as no surprise to many. That is your government’s modus operandi. It has always been. So, the recent intimidation of the opposition and its supporters, the beatings, the torture, the arrests, the detentions, and the killings is the only way the government knows how to deal with its opponents. Like MDC, PF ZAPU was branded by yourself and your government as saboteurs, and enemies of the State. We all know of course that PF ZAPU played as crucial a role for the independence of Zimbabwe as ZANU PF did and that its leaders spent an equal amount of time in political detention under the Ian Smith regime as ZANU PF leaders. Malunga is one such example. We also know that ZIPRA played as important a role in the armed struggle for Zimbabwe’s liberation. Yet, its commanders spent long spells in detention in post independent Zimbabwe under your government.

Let me revert to David Coltart’s track record in particular. I disagree with your one-sided and false allegations against him. I first came to know David Coltart in 1985 when he took up my late father’s case in which your government accused him of aiding or assisting dissidents. I should remind you Mr. President that at this time your government had declared its intention to ‘wipe out’ PF ZAPU and its leadership and the Zimbabwe National Army was fully deployed in Matabeleland and the Midlands amidst a state of emergency. It was an unsafe time for many of us and David Coltart showed courage and commitment to take up this case when not many lawyers were willing to do so for fear of repercussions from your government. Sidney Malunga was detained in April 1985 and David Coltart worked tirelessly, in the face of intimidation, threats, and difficult circumstances to secure his release. Even as Central Intelligence Organisation agents and police tortured and shuffled him from prison to prison in order to prevent him from having access to his lawyer, David Coltart left no stone unturned in order to consult with his client. I need not mention that with Coltart’s representation, Malunga was acquitted of these charges. Malunga was also charged with treason and again acquitted. Once again, David Coltart represented him in the most difficult of circumstances.

I disagree that Coltart is a puppet and that his opinions are anybody’s other than his own. As I know him, David Coltart is primarily a lawyer and a human rights advocate. He has always been a man of principle. Later on in 1991, I had the opportunity to work with him on some projects including the cases of the disappearances and alleged murders of civilians at the hands of the Gukurahundi in Matabeleland and Midlands in the eighties.

With no motive apart from the pursuit for justice, he headed the Bulawayo Legal Projects Centre in its assistance of victims of the Gukurahundi in their quest for accountability and compensation. I was impressed that as a white Zimbabwean Coltart was pre-occupied with pursuing justice for the thousands of black victims of human rights abuses by the government in the 1980’s. It is disappointing Mr. President that you now use race as a basis for attacking people like David Coltart. I recall how shortly after independence 1980 you called on all Zimbabweans in the diaspora, David Coltart included to return to Zimbabwe to contribute to building a truly non-racial society based on equality. Have you changed your mind Mr. President? Is Zimbabwe now only for blacks? How does that compare with the apartheid regime of Ian Smith?

As a young lawyer recently graduated from University in 1994, I found Coltart encouraging and inspirational. He nurtured my own interest in human rights and accountability of perpetrators of human rights abuse- a field in which I am now heavily involved in East Timor and hope to be involved one day in my own country. Now David Coltart finds himself, together with other leaders of the opposition as well as its supporters on the receiving end of your government’s wrath simply for holding opinions different from the governments. He and Roy Bennett are dutiful citizens exercising not only their constitutionally protected right to freedom of speech but also their parliamentary mandate on behalf of their constituents. To allege that Coltart is the puppet master of the opposition MP’s is to belittle the institution of Parliament, which is a cornerstone of our democratic heritage as well as to insult, our intelligence. I recall Mr. President how you branded Sidney Malunga, the late Lazarus Nzarayebani, Margaret Dongo and Byron Hove as rebels for their fearless debate and critical views of issues in the House of Assembly and their criticism of government policy. Is this a case of de ja vu? Once upon a time when you were Prime Minister you used to face MP’s during question time and tackle criticisms head on. Now it seems that the exercise of one of the most fundamental democratic functions (parliamentary representation) causes discomfiture to your government.

It is a most sad state of affairs Mr. President when in life the government hunts down those of its own citizens who fight for equality, democracy and human rights and later extols them in death. I say this of Sidney Malunga. I find it ironic that you attack the virtue and integrity of the one person, who, when you had Malunga cornered rose to the challenge and refused to allow your government to finish him off. Next time you speak of Malunga as the hero of heroes as you have described him, the voice of the voiceless, a fearless debater in Parliament, please Mr. President remember that were it not for people like David Coltart, Malunga may not have been able to be all these things and that he did all this in spite of the goverment harassment of him. As the son of this hero, a human rights lawyer and an accountability advocate, I therefore urge you to retract your criticisms and desist from further making them.

Finally, Mr. President, I wish to express my concern about the general state of affairs in Zimbabwe, which I am certain, has been caused by your government. The validity of the Presidential election remains an issue which must be resolved, over 6 million people face starvation and food aid is reportedly being denied to opposition supporters, the law is being applied selectively against opposition members or government opponents, the judiciary is constantly under attack from the executive for exercising its democratic and constitutionally protected independence, your government has constantly encroached on this independence, your party ZANU PF is reportedly torturing opposition supporters, and the government continues its onslaught on press freedom. This is indeed a sad state of affairs and one, which you are constitutionally obliged to redress.

I recommend that your government take the following measures as a matter of urgency:
· call a fresh Presidential election,
· ensure that food aid is distributed to all who need it regardless of political affiliations,
· repeal the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act which violates the freedom of the press,
· repeal the Public Order and Security Act which is the worst encroachment on constitutionally guaranteed civil liberties in Zimbabwe,
· assure the safety and protection of all citizens and allow them to exercise their fundamental rights without interference,
· not only comply with decisions of the Courts but also enforce them in order to maintain the greatest respect for the judiciary,
· bring to justice known perpetrators of human rights violations in Zimbabwe without further delay.

I thank you for taking the time to read my letter and pledge myself to participate in the process of bringing known violators of human rights justice should your government commence this process.

Yours sincerely
Siphosami Malunga
Dili, East Timor

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Mugabe must face trial for his crimes

The Telegraph (UK)

One of my Parliamentary colleagues in the Movement for Democratic Change is Fletcher Dulini’Ncube. A veteran campaigner for human rights and a former detainee in the Rhodesian era, he is diabetic. Last November Fletcher was detained by the Mugabe regime on trumped-up charges and held in solitary confinement for over a month under atrocious conditions, including the denial of adequate medical attention.

As a result he had to have his right eye surgically removed last week. The day after the operation Fletcher was dragged from his sick bed and placed under arrest by the Mugabe regime’s so-called Law and Order police. This weekend he lies in a Bulawayo hospital in leg irons under prison guard after a legal application to secure his release was dismissed by a recently appointed ex-war veteran judge.

The inhumane treatment of Fletcher is but a small part of the regime’s crackdown on its opponents. Thousands of farmers and their employees this weekend face summary arrest and eviction from their homes. We in the leadership of the MDC, the main opposition party to Mugabe, have been warned that our passports will shortly be withdrawn to prevent us from travelling abroad. Thousands of crimes committed against the opposition, including murder and rape, have not been investigated let alone prosecuted. The judiciary has been all but destroyed; independent journalists have been arrested.

Even education has not been left alone: new laws will ensure the regime’s control over the appointment of headmasters in private schools. Food is being used as a political weapon against thousands of ordinary Zimbabweans who oppose the regime. In short, Zimbabwe increasingly resembles Cambodia under Pol Pot. The regime’s intention seems clear: to turn Zimbabwe into a nation of 12 million peasants dependant on its small super-rich, corrupt ruling elite.

Mugabe, however, desperately needs the support of his neighbours and other countries to survive. Unlike Pol Pot, the Mugabe regime craves international legitimacy and, after 22 years in power, the ZANU (PF) elite have become accustomed to the good life. Having got away with even worse atrocities in the 1980s against Joshua Nkomo’s supporters they assumed before the election in March, that the world would simply look the other way. Accordingly the regime has been stung by its partial suspension from the Commonwealth and the extension of targeted sanctions by the EU and other countries. Mugabe’s response has not been to address the concerns of the West. It has been to travel to Cuba and Malaysia, while some of his colleagues have been to Libya and Iran. Clearly he is trying to secure an international coalition which will force the West to relent and accept his regime, warts and all.

No one can seriously believe that the regime has any intention of normalising the situation (as has been suggested by some in the Commonwealth recently). Just as the regime was prepared to use any means to secure victory in the presidential election so it will use them to retain power. The tragedy is that now, given the scale of the man-made famine combined with the Aids pandemic, that determination could well result in hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans losing their lives in the coming months.

The only way that catastrophe can be averted is by the restoration of the rule of law in Zimbabwe. This alone will ensure that a massive summer maize crop is planted and irrigated by experienced farmers and that the exodus of thousands of talented Zimbabweans of all races stops. However the rule of law will only be restored through holding a fresh election that complies with acceptable standards.

There appears to be much hand wringing in the West about what to do. Food aid has been increased but that will deal with the symptoms, not the cause, of famine. Pleas have been made to Zimbabwe’s neighbours to act but few African states have the political will to deal with the crisis. Mugabe has shown in recent weeks that he is quite prepared to divide the African Union and the Commonwealth to remain in power. The regime has not hesitated to play the racial card both domestically and internationally and the crisis is constantly portrayed as a spat between Britain and her former colony. Mugabe’s purpose is to raise the stakes in the hope of deterring the West from taking sterner measures for fear of, for example, splitting the Commonwealth.

The crisis is now so grave, however, that the West must not be deterred from taking decisive action. Two distinct courses of action should be followed. First, those in Zimbabwe guilty of torture (as defined by the International Convention) should be investigated and prosecuted. Aside from the abuses of the past two years, food is now being used as a political weapon which is already resulting in thousands suffering. Many could die unless those responsible know that they will be held accountable for their actions. The vast majority of those who may die will be MDC supporters denied food solely because of their political beliefs. That is clearly a crime against humanity.

Second, the West, in conjunction with its democratic African allies, must now seriously consider its responsibility to protect Zimbabweans. The report of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty published in December 2001 points out that where a population is suffering serious harm as a result of repression or state failure, and the state in question is unwilling to halt the suffering, the usual principle of non-intervention yields to the international responsibility to protect.

The principle of state sovereignty, so readily used by the Mugabe regime to protect itself, is not absolute. With sovereignty comes a responsibility for the state to protect its people. But more than six million Zimbabweans face starvation as a direct result of the state’s failure and its use of food aid as a political weapon. In these circumstances the civilised world has a responsibility to protect the Zimbabwean people and to do so it should intervene in the manner proposed by the International Commission.

If future famines are to be avoided and if what was once the jewel of Africa is not to become another Somalia, governments in the West must act urgently with their African colleagues to address the root cause of the catastrophe now unfolding in Zimbabwe.

· The author is Zimbabwe’s shadow Minister of Justice.

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Zimbabwe in 2002

The New York Times

In the last two years Zimbabwe has been transformed into a state that increasingly resembles Cambodia under Pol Pot. The government seems set on adding famine to the list of oppressions visited on the nation. In May, a law was passed decreeing that any commercial farmer who continued to farm 45 days after being given notice to stop would face imprisonment.

On Friday, that law will be used to evict thousands of commercial farmers and their workers. Fear and desperation pervade the country. All the signs are that President Robert Mugabe is determined to hold on to power at any cost, including the destruction of the nation and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans.

It has been clear for some years that the Mugabe regime is determined to shrink the democratic space to an absolute minimum. The judiciary has been all but destroyed. Independent journalists have been arrested, their presses bombed. In January the regime rammed through Parliament legislation subverting the electoral process, revoking civil liberties and restricting the press. In the same month, the military suggested that only Mr. Mugabe would be acceptable as leader.

The political campaign that followed was marked by violence. The presidential election in March was a farce. Mr. Mugabe was proclaimed winner in an election that was widely condemned internationally. The overwhelming majority of Zimbabweans, who were hoping for a peaceful transition to democracy in March, have had their hopes dashed.

For its part, the Mugabe regime, while increasingly irrational and paranoid, knows it must convince the world it is legitimate if it is to survive. For this reason, the regime cloaks its suppression of democracy in what would otherwise be legitimate concerns, primarily the need to redress legacies of colonial injustice. The unresolved land-ownership issue has been exploited very effectively to cover up corruption, poor administration and human-rights abuses.

The catastrophic human-rights situation is now complicated by a famine that is, in the case of Zimbabwe, mainly the result of the Mugabe regime’s ruinous policies. While a drought did occur at a critical period during the summer, it only affected the dry-land corn crop. The rainy season was just below average and nearly all the irrigation reservoirs are almost full. Had experienced farmers been allowed to plant their crops, Zimbabwe would not have had to import any food at all.

As it is, Zimbabwe is now facing a shortage of some 1.2 million tons of corn. The situation is compounded by the fact that only a small proportion of the winter wheat crop has been planted because of threats directed against wheat farmers. If the Mugabe regime goes ahead this weekend with its plans to evict thousands of farmers and their employees, many of their crops will not be properly harvested.

The World Food Program recently predicted that as many as 6 million Zimbabweans will soon face starvation. At least 25 percent of Zimbabweans are H.I.V. positive. Experts are agreed that some 20 percent of AIDS sufferers are extremely vulnerable to drops in nutritional levels. Conservatively, one might calculate that 300,000 Zimbabweans could die within the next few months as a result of this combination of famine and AIDS.

The Mugabe regime may be counting on catastrophe for its own salvation. It has already sought to hide behind drought. There is no doubt a calculation taking place that the “CNN factor” (images of starving children) will soon dominate policy decisions in the West and that a flood of aid will pour in.

That Zimbabwe and other countries in the region need vast amounts of food and medical aid is beyond doubt. But if the symptom of famine is addressed but not its cause, the international community will only have succeeded in perpetuating the problem. Ongoing food shortages will occur unless a massive irrigated corn crop is planted this November. It can still be planted if the rule of law is re-established – which will only occur with help from Zimbabwe’s neighbors and through holding a fresh election that complies with accepted standards.

Sadly, there are very few levers left which can be used by the West to restore sanity to Zimbabwe. The new relationship between Africa and the wealthy industrialized countries – as expressed in the recent meetings between representatives of the Group of 8 and the New Economic Partnership for Africa’s Development – is one such lever. While Zimbabwe should not be allowed to hold hostage democratic African states that desperately need the new partnership to work, the reality is that, like it or not, Zimbabwe is the partnership’s first test. Famine in Zimbabwe is primarily caused by bad governance, which in this specific case is tolerated by many African states and supported by some. The consequences of this man-made famine will become clear in the next few months. Investors the world over will be watching closely to see whether African rulers deal with the cause of this particular famine, not merely its symptoms. If African leaders do not act in these circumstances, what investment in Africa will ever be safe in the future?

Yet there has been very little to indicate that African states have the political will to deal with the crisis in Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is becoming a police state without so much as a whimper coming from the same African states who heralded a new beginning for Africa at the Group of 8 meeting and the inauguration of the African Union.

If leaders in the industrialized democracies are interested in preventing what was once the jewel of Africa from becoming another Somalia – and in preventing future famines in southern Africa – then they must persuade their African colleagues to deal with the real cause of the catastrophe unfolding in Zimbabwe.

David Coltart, a member of Zimbabwe’s Parliament, is a leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, the main opposition party.

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Zimbabwe’s Man-Made Famine

The New York Times

In the last two years Zimbabwe has been transformed into a state that increasingly resembles Cambodia under Pol Pot. The government seems set on adding famine to the list of oppressions visited on the nation. In May, a law was passed decreeing that any commercial farmer who continued to farm 45 days after being given notice to stop would face imprisonment.

On Friday, that law will be used to evict thousands of commercial farmers and their workers. Fear and desperation pervade the country. All the signs are that President Robert Mugabe is determined to hold on to power at any cost, including the destruction of the nation and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans.

It has been clear for some years that the Mugabe regime is determined to shrink the democratic space to an absolute minimum. The judiciary has been all but destroyed. Independent journalists have been arrested, their presses bombed. In January the regime rammed through Parliament legislation subverting the electoral process, revoking civil liberties and restricting the press. In the same month, the military suggested that only Mr. Mugabe would be acceptable as leader.

The political campaign that followed was marked by violence. The presidential election in March was a farce. Mr. Mugabe was proclaimed winner in an election that was widely condemned internationally. The overwhelming majority of Zimbabweans, who were hoping for a peaceful transition to democracy in March, have had their hopes dashed.
For its part, the Mugabe regime, while increasingly irrational and paranoid, knows it must convince the world it is legitimate if it is to survive. For this reason, the regime cloaks its suppression of democracy in what would otherwise be legitimate concerns, primarily the need to redress legacies of colonial injustice. The unresolved land-ownership issue has been exploited very effectively to cover up corruption, poor administration and human-rights abuses.

The catastrophic human-rights situation is now complicated by a famine that is, in the case of Zimbabwe, mainly the result of the Mugabe regime’s ruinous policies. While a drought did occur at a critical period during the summer, it only affected the dry-land corn crop. The rainy season was just below average and nearly all the irrigation reservoirs are almost full. Had experienced farmers been allowed to plant their crops, Zimbabwe would not have had to import any food at all.

As it is, Zimbabwe is now facing a shortage of some 1.2 million tons of corn. The situation is compounded by the fact that only a small proportion of the winter wheat crop has been planted because of threats directed against wheat farmers. If the Mugabe regime goes ahead this weekend with its plans to evict thousands of farmers and their employees, many of their crops will not be properly harvested.

The World Food Program recently predicted that as many as 6 million Zimbabweans will soon face starvation. At least 25 percent of Zimbabweans are H.I.V. positive. Experts are agreed that some 20 percent of AIDS sufferers are extremely vulnerable to drops in nutritional levels. Conservatively, one might calculate that 300,000 Zimbabweans could die within the next few months as a result of this combination of famine and AIDS.
The Mugabe regime may be counting on catastrophe for its own salvation. It has already sought to hide behind drought. There is no doubt a calculation taking place that the “CNN factor” (images of starving children) will soon dominate policy decisions in the West and that a flood of aid will pour in.

That Zimbabwe and other countries in the region need vast amounts of food and medical aid is beyond doubt. But if the symptom of famine is addressed but not its cause, the international community will only have succeeded in perpetuating the problem. Ongoing food shortages will occur unless a massive irrigated corn crop is planted this November. It can still be planted if the rule of law is re-established – which will only occur with help from Zimbabwe’s neighbors and through holding a fresh election that complies with accepted standards.

Sadly, there are very few levers left which can be used by the West to restore sanity to Zimbabwe. The new relationship between Africa and the wealthy industrialized countries – as expressed in the recent meetings between representatives of the Group of 8 and the New Economic Partnership for Africa’s Development – is one such lever. While Zimbabwe should not be allowed to hold hostage democratic African states that desperately need the new partnership to work, the reality is that, like it or not, Zimbabwe is the partnership’s first test. Famine in Zimbabwe is primarily caused by bad governance, which in this specific case is tolerated by many African states and supported by some. The consequences of this man-made famine will become clear in the next few months. Investors the world over will be watching closely to see whether African rulers deal with the cause of this particular famine, not merely its symptoms. If African leaders do not act in these circumstances, what investment in Africa will ever be safe in the future?

Yet there has been very little to indicate that African states have the political will to deal with the crisis in Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is becoming a police state without so much as a whimper coming from the same African states who heralded a new beginning for Africa at the Group of 8 meeting and the inauguration of the African Union.

If leaders in the industrialized democracies are interested in preventing what was once the jewel of Africa from becoming another Somalia – and in preventing future famines in southern Africa – then they must persuade their African colleagues to deal with the real cause of the catastrophe unfolding in Zimbabwe.

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MDC statement regarding Gwanda food distribution

The MDC has been made aware of further evidence of the illegitimate Mugabe regime using food as political weapon in the Gwanda district of Matabeleland South Province.

On Friday the 12th July 2002 a meeting of the “Gwanda drought relief and food distribution committee” was convened in Gwanda. It is pertinent to note that Gwanda town is situation in Gwanda North Constituency whose present Member of Parliament is Paul Temba Nyathi, an MDC MP. The MDC is in possession of the agenda of the meeting that supports the assertions made in this statement.

The ZANU (PF) MP chaired the meeting for Beitbridge, a neighbouring Constituency, Kembo Mohadi. Mr Mohadi chaired and addressed the meeting. The meeting was also attended by the local Chairman of ZANU (PF) and War Veterans. No member of the MDC was present nor were any invited or made aware of the meeting. Representatives of the GMB, Gwanda Rural District Council, and World Vision. Organisation Help and the Gwanda Municipality attended the meeting.

During the course of the meeting Mr Mohadi made, inter alia, the following remarks, namely that:
1. NGOs were there at “government’s” invitation and were not doing the feeding, “government” was;
2. NGOs were only involved because of the agreement between the WFP/UNDP and the “lawfully elected government”;
3. NGOs were only involved as implementing partners and accordingly would have to follow “government” directives;
4. he wanted a list of all equipment used by NGOs to distribute food as “government” would be taking the same over in due course;
5. “wearing his political hat” he would very unhappy if NGOs were the sole distributors of food in certain wards and asked for comment from the ZANU (PF) members present as to whether they would be happy with such an arrangement, inferring that they may lose political control over such areas;
6. he was a member of a “Cabinet” Committee on Social Services Action and that the meeting he was chairing was one of many similar meetings taking place countrywide.

It is reported that Mr Mohadi displayed an aggressive bullying attitude throughout the meeting. The intention of the meeting appeared to be an attempt to find out what the NGOs were doing with a view to establish ZANU (PF) control over food distribution. A very clear objective to control and even take over NGO feeding programmes was evident.

This meeting is yet a further example of ZANU (PF)’s intention to use food as a political weapon. It is ironic that the meeting should have taken place in the very same province that ZANU (PF) imposed a curfew in 1984 and used food then as a political weapon against members of ZAPU, which Mr Mohadi was a member of then.

It is outrageous that the Hon Paul T Nyathi MP was not invited to the member. The famine facing Zimbabwe is a national crisis and local MDC MPs should be included in all such meetings countrywide.

The MDC calls upon the WFP/ UNDP and all NGOs to insist that the MDC be included in all such planning meetings. If the MDC is not included food will continue to be used a political weapon throughout the country. There is clear evidence that MDC members countrywide are being excluded from feeding programmes. There is further evidence that ZANU (PF) is seeking to control feeding programmes countrywide so as to bolster their support.

Food should never be used as a political weapon. Whilst we are gratified to note that the Director of the WFP warned Robert Mugabe last week at the AU meeting that the WFP would show zero-tolerance against the regime if food was used as a political weapon we remain concerned that Mugabe’s assurance that this would not happen was accepted too readily. The Mugabe regime has demonstrated several times in the past few years that its assurances cannot be trusted (the Abuja agreement being but one example). The WFP must now insist that the MDC be included in all decision-making bodies to ensure that food is distributed to all Zimbabweans irrespective of their political beliefs or ethnicity.

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Opposition seeks new extension of vote

The Daily Telegraph
10th March 2002
Anonymous

ZIMBABWE’S opposition party today again asked a High Court to extend voting in presidential elections, citing continued delays at urban polling stations.

“We have applied to the High Court for another 24 hours extension of the polls. We have also asked that the registrar general and those who resisted the orders of the court to open the polling stations today be held in contempt,” Movement for Democratic Change MP David Coltart said, adding that the hearing should be held later today.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who is tipped to win a free and fair election, went to the courts yesterday accusing the government of creating delays in Harare in a deliberate attempt to reduce the vote in his urban strongholds. Voting outlets were increased for rural voters, the main support base of president Robert Mugabe.

The court ordered an extension for today, but MDC officials said more time was needed in Harare.

“They opened stations five hours late. We need an extension. They should make up for that time,” MDC spokesman Nomore Sibanda said. “Even after opening up, they then allowed violence to take place, because our people were being beaten up by ZANU-PF thugs,” he said, referring to the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front.

Mr Tsvangirai has accused Mr Mugabe of attempting to steal the election by driving opposition observers from 43 per cent of the rural polling stations, some of the rural counting stations and keeping people in urban areas from voting.

Mr Coltart also said the party’s secretary-general and third ranking official, Welshman Ncube, was arrested today in the southwestern town of Plumtree, while his deputy, Gift Chimanikire, was detained in Harare.

Police gave no reason for the arrests, but Mr Ncube has been charged with treason in a previous case.

Mr Mugabe is facing the toughest challenge to his 22-year grip on power from Mr Tsvangirai, a former trade union leader.

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MDC rallies are cancelled as poll violence spreads

The Daily Telegraph
28th January 2002
By Peta Thornycroft in Harare

INTENSIFYING violence yesterday forced Zimbabwe’s opposition to abandon all its public rallies in the presidential election campaign.
The decision by the Movement for Democratic Change came after one of its supporters died and several others were critically injured at the weekend. The shadow justice minister, David Coltart, said the MDC had decided to abandon political rallies until foreign observers arrived.

He said: “We have to give four days notice to the police, and this puts our supporters at risk. We will be holding small house meetings in future for which we do not need official permission.”

European Union foreign ministers meet today to consider sanctions against Zimbabwe. It is believed that the measures will be triggered if President Mugabe refuses to accept foreign election monitors.

The opposition says the Harare government is mounting an increasingly brutal campaign ahead of the March 9-10 presidential poll, in which Mr Mugabe is expected to face the toughest challenge so far to his 22-year rule from Morgan Tsvangirai.

Mkhokosize Ncube, who was aged about 20, died in Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, a week after pro-government youths went on a rampage at a stadium to disrupt an MDC rally.

At least two more MDC supporters were injured, one critically, when supporters of Mr Mugabe attacked MDC members at two election rallies in Harare on Saturday.

Another political meeting scheduled in Bulawayo yesterday was cancelled when scores of uniformed national servicemen, loyal to Mugabe, arrived several hours before it was due to begin.

The servicemen are effectively a new pro-government militia selected by the Defence Ministry and paid by the state. They have gained a fearsome reputation for attacking the government’s opponents during the past six weeks.

The MDC says it does not know how many of its members are currently in police cells or hospitals around the country, or how many more were attacked at the weekend. A police spokesman said he also did not have the figures.

But the MDC said several thousand of its members have been beaten and tortured recently and at least 10,000 have fled their homes. Many are now in “safe houses”.

In what political observers say is a pattern of selective police prosecution, hundreds of MDC loyalists, including six MPs, are awaiting trial on a range of charges from murder to public violence. An MDC spokesman, Learnmore Jongwe, said yesterday: “We cannot keep up with statistics because so many of our structures have been smashed.”

The government says only monitors it has trained will be allowed at the polls. Although Mr Mugabe told southern African leaders earlier this month that foreign observers would be allowed into Zimbabwe ahead of the elections, so far no invitations have gone out.
Mr Mugabe has let it be known to the state-controlled media, that Britain, the Netherlands and Scandinavian countries have been specifically excluded from observing the run up to the elections and the two polling days.

Tony Reeler, director of the Amani Trust, which monitors violence, said yesterday it had been forced to stop sheltering hundreds of vulnerable people since it was accused by the government last week of promoting political attacks on behalf of the MDC.
“We are extremely concerned as a humanitarian organisation to be so threatened,” he added. He said the trust did not have accurate statistics about political violence.

“We can only record what people come into town and tell us. We are unable to go into the field, but we do know that it is substantially worse in the first two weeks of this month than in December,” he said.

Information from the MDC leadership is that a growing number of its young supporters have become involved in violence against the ruling party, Zanu-PF.

“The difference,” said an MDC leader who did not want to be named, “is that we do not give orders to our members to attack Zanu-PF. We condemn them and we will not provide any financial or legal assistance to supporters who initiate violence.”
President Mugabe is to be presented with one last warning before Britain and other nations take action against human rights abuses in Zimbabwe.

Jack Straw, Foreign Secretary, will today ask European Union leaders to agree a timetable for sanctions. On Wednesday he will make a similar plea to Commonwealth leaders in London.

The EU General Affairs Council is expected to call on Mr Mugabe to end attempts to silence critics and allow international observers for the election. This will be backed by a threat to cut aid by £78.5 million.

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Party rebel puts Mugabe media curb on hold

The Daily Telegraph
17th January 2002
By Peta Thornycroft in Harare

A MEDIA Bill intended by President Robert Mugabe to silence his critics was put on hold yesterday after a revolt in parliament from within the ranks of his own Zanu-PF party.

Dr Edison Zvobgo, a Zanu-PF founder who heads the parliamentary legal committee, delayed the second reading of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Bill by being “unavailable” to present a report on the Bill to parliament.

The block appeared to have forced the government to consider amending the Bill, which has been widely criticised for its threat to jail journalists if they breach a “code of conduct”, before it comes before the house again next week.

It was the second time in two days that Dr Zvobgo, a key member of parliament, had obstructed the will of his leader. Under the constitution, Dr Zvobgo’s committee must vet Bills before they are put to a second vote.

On Tuesday his committee said an amendment to labour legislation, which would have outlawed strikes and trade unions if they were seen to hurt the economy, was in conflict with freedom of association provisions in the constitution.

Yesterday, the media Bill, which would have outlawed independent and foreign journalists not approved by the government, did not appear on the order paper as expected.

Political sources in Harare said that Dr Zvobgo and his committee would have found many clauses within the media Bill unconstitutional.

Speaking in parliament, Patrick Chinamasa, Mr Mugabe’s justice minister, said: “After some lengthy consultations with objective-minded media organisations and the deliberation with honourable members on my side, I have suggested some amendments to the Access to Information and Privacy Bill.” Parliament was adjourned until Tuesday.

Zanu-PF lobbyists are expected to try to strike a deal with Dr Zvobgo to submit his report if some of the Bill’s more robust clauses are withdrawn.

Dr John Makumbe, a political analyst, said: “They are in a bind but, remember, the president can rule by decree and that Bill, and the amendments to labour legislation, can still be put into law, and Zanu-PF needs them ahead of the elections.”

President Mugabe faces the strongest challenge yet to his 22-year rule from Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, in March’s presidential elections.

David Coltart, the shadow justice minister, said yesterday: “Zanu PF want these Bills pushed through, that’s why they have adjourned until Tuesday, presumably so they can work on Zvobgo.”

Dr Zvobgo was one of the founders of Zanu-PF, and its main legal negotiator at the Lancaster House talks in 1979 which led to Zimbabwe’s independence.

In recent years he fell out with Mr Mugabe because he criticised the way the party was run, particularly in his province, Masvingo, south of Harare. He was dropped from the cabinet and from the politburo but is on record as saying he would never leave Zanu-PF.

Several key members of Zanu-PF were absent from parliament on key voting days in the past few weeks, including Simba Makoni, the finance minister who chose to spend time on his farm instead.

Meanwhile, there are shortages of maize meal, the staple food, for a second week, with most rural shops having run out.
Political sources said Mr Mugabe’s cabinet is panicking as it realises that there is no way maize meal can be brought into Zimbabwe from South Africa within three weeks.

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It’s Time to Complete the Change: A New Year’s Message – 2002

In June 2001 I wrote that the political tide in Zimbabwe had turned and that the process of change was inevitable. Nothing has happened since then to alter my view except that we are now only two months away from a watershed election that will enable Zimbabweans to vote into power a man who has a vision for a new non violent, peaceful, transparent, democratic and prosperous Zimbabwe. That man is Morgan Tsvangirai. Because of the hardships that virtually all Zimbabweans are experiencing at present there are many who find it hard to believe that Morgan Tsvangirai can become President of Zimbabwe, much as they desire that to happen. Mugabe has, after all, said that Tsvangirai will “never, ever” rule and is doing all in his power to make that prediction a reality.

2001 has been a very tough year for most Zimbabweans. We knew it would be that way, and warned of it. The last few months have been the toughest: rampant inflation, increased violence, politically motivated detentions, selective application of the “law” and the passing of new unjust laws and policies have combined to plunge many into the depths of depression.

Very little that ZANU (PF) has done has come as a surprise to us. The events of this year have not been random or unplanned. On the contrary they have been part of a deliberate campaign by Mugabe and to subdue the Zimbabwean people. Mugabe has used a combination of physical and psychological measures to crush opposition to his tyrannical rule. The physical measures are fairly obvious: bombing the Daily News, threatening the Judiciary, murdering, beating and detaining members of the MDC, forcing farmers off the land, assaulting and displacing thousands of farm workers and raiding businesses and industry.

The psychological measures are less obvious but far more effective in undermining morale. And there have been many; indeed the pervasiveness of all the measures is staggering and requires listing. The passing of the Citizenship Act mid year and its deliberate misinterpretation by the Registrar General (“requiring” people to renounce a mere entitlement to citizenship of another country) has thrown many into a frenzy. The insidious threat of immediate eviction of farmers, and the barring of them from reaping their crops already planted, posed by Statutory Instrument 338 in November caused many farmers to lose all hope. The termination of Radio 1, and its subsequent replacement by first “Sport” and then, ridiculously, “Spot” Radio was deliberately done to depress people who enjoyed their programmes. Then there are all the rumors deliberately fed into the system: “10000 Libyans in the country as part of hit squads”, “arms imported to deal with the opposition” and even the pathetic “Coltart evacuates family”. All of these are designed to depress and to induce a sense of panic.

One would have thought that, having introduced such a wide array of measures, he would have succeeded in crushing opposition to his rule. However the last few weeks have seen Mugabe’s regime resorting to new, and increasingly desperate, measures. They have murdered their own as a pretext to detain, and brand, the MDC as “terrorists”. The Public Order and Security Bill, “POSB”, has been introduced in Parliament to prevent criticism of the President, to stifle peaceful forms of protest (such as civil disobedience) and create State of Emergency conditions without actually having to declare a State of Emergency. Likewise the “no” Access to Information Bill has been introduced with the clear intention of silencing independent journalists and the media. Finally, in a complete negation of the liberation struggle cry of “one person one vote”, ZANU (PF)’s proposed amendments to the Electoral Act will make it harder for Zimbabweans to register as voters and more difficult for Zimbabwean civil society to observe and monitor the elections. All of these betray Mugabe’s sense of panic – he is are no longer confident that he can win an election even if it is fought in the extremely unfair conditions which prevailed in the 2000 Parliamentary election. As draconian as these measures are, more than anything else they constitute an admission by ZANU (PF) that their violent and unlawful strategies have failed and they are now in deep trouble in the run up to the Presidential election.

For all the depression felt by many Zimbabweans the fact remains that this regime would not be resorting to such extreme measures if Mugabe were confident of winning the election. If those committed to democracy feel depressed it is nothing compared to the desperation and paranoia prevailing in the Mugabe camp, which is due to three critical factors working against them.

In summary these are: (1) the incredible turn around and support of the international community in the course of 2001, (2) the amazing courage and determination of Zimbabweans to secure change in the face of violence and tyranny and (3) the emergence of a government in waiting, led by a charismatic and competent leader, ready to lead Zimbabwe to a peaceful and prosperous future.

The International Community

It may seem trite but Zimbabwe cannot survive without the support of the international community. Zimbabwe is relatively weak, landlocked and oil-less. Correspondingly both ZANU (PF) and the MDC cannot survive without the support of the international community. ZANU (PF), because it cannot hope to restore the economy and govern in the long term without that support. The MDC, because it does not have the physical power itself to guarantee a free and fair election. The views of the international community regarding what is happening in Zimbabwe are therefore equally important to the MDC and ZANU (PF). ZANU (PF) needed the international community to buy its argument that land is the core issue and that it is an innocent actor. The MDC needed the international community to buy its argument that good governance is the core issue.

It was with this in mind that Mugabe selected his cabinet. For example his choice of Jonathan Moyo as Information Minister was not made with Zimbabweans in mind but rather with the international community, and especially SADC, in mind. When ZANU (PF) came within a whisker of losing the June 2000 election they realized then that they would battle to win the first-past-the-post-countrywide Presidential election. To win they would have to implement the fast track land programme and increase levels of intimidation and violence. But it recognized early on that it would have to create elaborate smokescreens because it could not embark on such schemes with impunity unless ZANU (PF) could portray itself as a relatively innocent actor. Mugabe knows that he will still have to govern Zimbabwe after the election and that he will not be able to do so without international assistance. In other words not only did ZANU (PF) have to get the international community to buy its argument as to what the cause of the strife within Zimbabwe was, but also it had to get the international community to turn a blind eye to abuses of human rights so that Mugabe’s government would be recognized and aid would flow after the election. And so Jonathan Moyo’s task has been to convey to the world that ZANU (PF) is merely responding to people-pressure for land and that Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC are unreconstructed “terrorists”. If the international community, and especially SADC, bought into ZANU (PF)’s argument, ZANU (PF) could subvert the electoral process with impunity. Mugabe cynically calculated that the West would apply a different standard to Zimbabwe (“African elections are violent”) and that African nations would be sympathetic to the argument that the land invasions were uncontrollable and that in any event the MDC was just as violent as ZANU (PF). In other words he calculated that he would be able to get away with bludgeoning his way to electoral victory and that the international community would simply forgive and forget after he resumed the presidency.

The MDC has had to counter massive internal and international propaganda of ZANU (PF) that land was the core issue, that the violence was not of ZANU (PF)’s making but part of “spontaneous demonstrations” by landless people and that the MDC was a violent neo-colonial outfit designed to return Zimbabwe to Rhodesia

The MDC has faced a daunting task to overcome this strategy. Not only is Zimbabwe a tiny country with an inconsequential economy on the world’s forgotten continent, but also it had to contend with western skepticism and ignorance. Added to that, it was up against a government that was prepared to use millions of taxpayers’ money to employ lobbyists. But the MDC has won this battle.

To demonstrate this it is appropriate to start with the United States of America. Both ZANU (PF) and the MDC recognized that the approach of the USA was critically important, not just because it is so powerful but in particular because it holds so much sway in South Africa. That is why ZANU (PF) employed American lobbyists Cohen and Woods and subsequently Andrew Young to do its bidding in Washington. Cohen and Woods had much fertile ground to work with when they started. Successive MDC delegations to Washington in 2000 found that many influential members of the all-important Congressional Black Caucus still viewed Mugabe as a “liberator”. Others had bought into the ZANU (PF) line that the chaos was the result of an unresolved colonial, and racial, legacy.

The tragic events of September 11th initially appeared to make the MDC’s task harder. The international media turned its attention elsewhere and it seemed to many hoping for democratic change in Zimbabwe that Mugabe had the perfect cover. But our fears have not been realized for, far from it going off the radar screen, Zimbabwe has come into sharp focus in the minds of many influential Americans since the 11th September.

The first inkling of this was given when United States District Judge Victor Marrero handed down his 130 page judgment on the 30th October 2001 in the case brought against Mugabe for damages by Adella Chiminya, Maria Stevens and others who have lost loved ones at the hands of Mugabe’s thugs. Judge Marrero found that Tapfuma Chiminya, David Stevens and the other loved ones were, because of their support for the MDC, “extra judicially murdered …by operatives of ZANU (PF) operating in concert with or significantly aided by high-ranking Zimbabwe government officials acting outside the color of state law”. However the Judge found that he could not grant judgment against Mugabe because he enjoyed head-of-state immunity. The Judge was clearly pained by this and as he said “the enormity of the atrocities”. Accordingly he qualified his judgment by stating:

“resort to head-of-state immunity as a shield for private abuses of the sovereign’s office is wearing thinner in the eyes of the world and waning in the cover of the law. The prevailing trend teaches that the day (will) come to pass when those who violate their public trust are called upon…to render account for the wrongs they inflict on innocents.”

Then significantly the Judge, who sits in New York, made a telling link between the case at hand and the events of 11th September by stating:

“Today, events around us bear witness almost daily to the destructive power of individuals whose chosen way of life is to do wrong by inflicting harms of mass proportions. With modern means, the hands of one or a few persons hold the force sufficient to wreak in moments wanton destruction and horror of a magnitude that it once took whole armies to inflict….(t)o iniquity’s purpose of propagating large-scale grief, as evidenced by the case at hand, its capacity for injustice is virtually limitless because it honors none of the self-imposed restraints that contain the conduct of the civilized world within decent bounds.”

Having made that link of terror the Judge concluded by calling for the law to “stand ready to adapt as appropriate, to shape, redress and remedy so as to answer measure for measure the particular evil it pursues” and granting judgment against the only entity he could, namely ZANU (PF). I have dwelt on this judgment because it illustrates what informed ordinary apolitical Americans think about what is going on in Zimbabwe, who is responsible for terror in this country and what should be done about it. The judgment also decisively placed Mugabe on the wrong side of President Bush’s fence dividing those who oppose and those who support terrorism throughout the world.

Ironically both Mugabe and Jonathan Moyo have further compounded their predicament since the beginning of November. Mugabe, in an emotional speech given on the 18th November, said that he would not be dictated to by those “in their tall towers” in the West and accused Tony Blair of being involved in acts of terrorism in Zimbabwe. In mid November the ZBC, which falls under Moyo’s command, started mimicking CNN’s by-line “The fight against terrorism” to describe ZANU (PF)’s crack down on the MDC. These actions demean America’s legitimate fight against real terrorists and lost Mugabe any remaining friends he might have still had in America.

The first sign of this loss of support was given in the photograph of Jesse Jackson congratulating Daily News editor Geoff Nyarota (who had just received a press freedom award in Washington) on the 28th November. Jackson, it will be recalled, has been in the past a Mugabe apologist. Jackson’s action in meeting Nyarota was a harbinger of things to come. In early December the House of Representatives was called upon to vote on the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Bill. ZANU (PF) thought that the Congressional Black Caucus would vote against it. But in a truly historic vote the Bill passed by 369 votes to 11. Not a single member of the CBC voted against it and the 369 affirmative votes included every informed and influential member of the CBC. So much for Mugabe’s assertion that this is only a racist Jesse Helms Bill! The action of the CBC in this regard demonstrates the determination of all Americans to fight terrorism in whatever forms it appears and is a damning indictment against Mugabe. The strong language used by highly respected former Chairperson of the CBC, Donald Payne, in supporting the language must have shaken Mugabe and ZANU (PF) to the core.

The signing of the Zimbabwe Democracy Economic Recovery Bill (ZIDERA) into law by President Bush just before Christmas completed the transformation, in the minds of Americans, of Mugabe from African statesman to tyrant and marked the beginning of a new chapter. The Act in itself is graphic evidence of the failure of ZANU (PF)’s propaganda campaign and an acceptance that the lack of good governance in Zimbabwe is at the core of Zimbabwe’s crisis. More worrying for Mugabe and his henchmen is the fact that ZIDERA signals America’s determination to assist in the democratization of Zimbabwe. If Mugabe does not hold free and fair elections there will be dramatic consequences for the ZANU (PF) elite in the form of personal sanctions. Gone too is Mugabe’s argument that the Zimbabwe crisis is simply a spat with its former colonial master, Britain. Finally, America’s lead will have, and already has had, a powerful influence over the way the EU, SADC, and the Commonwealth deal with the problem.

The transformation of the EU’s approach to the Zimbabwean crisis over the last year has been equally remarkable. At the beginning of 2001 France, Belgium and, to a lesser extent Spain, were not convinced that the MDC’s version of what lay at the core of Zimbabwe’s problems was correct. That attitude was complicated by the fact that France and Belgium appeared to be reluctant to jeopardize their relationship with Mugabe because of concerns related to Zimbabwe’s involvement in the Congo. Without the support of France and Belgium, forthright action against Zimbabwe in the EU would have been difficult if not impossible. The turn around of France and Belgium on the 29th October, when they voted with the rest of the EU to invoke Article 96 of the Cotonou Agreement (the precursor to sanctions against Zimbabwe) surprised many of us in the MDC and was deeply shocking to ZANU (PF) – they just never believed that their erstwhile friends would do such a thing. The depth of their shock was displayed when Mugabe walked out (in a huff) of a meeting with senior EU ambassadors in Harare on the 23rd November. This is the man who used to be able to charm world leaders and who has successfully pulled the wool over the eyes of democratically elected leaders for decades. He finally lost his cool and let his guard down because he realized that the game is up. The bottom line is the EU is now also an avowed enemy of ZANU (PF) and former supporters of the party such as Sweden are vilified. The reason: the EU also has firmly rejected ZANU (PF)’s propaganda line and is demanding that there be free and fair elections and good governance. If there are not, Article 96 will be pursued vigorously.

Zimbabweans have been extremely critical, with good cause, of the Commonwealth over the last two years. It all started with Secretary General McKinnon’s disastrous assurance given just before the June 2000 election that Mugabe would act decently. Since then there have been a succession of wishy-washy Commonwealth statements and actions (or more appropriately inactions) that have discredited the organisation. It is not surprising that ZANU (PF) until recently were happy to have the Commonwealth monitor Zimbabwean elections. The strongly worded statement, that the situation constituted a “serious and persistent violation of the Commonwealth’s fundamental political values”, emanating from the Commonwealth Ministers’ Action Group (CMAG) on the 20th December would have shocked ZANU (PF). CMAG resolved to review the situation at its next meeting, to be held on the 30th January 2002, and Zimbabwe has been placed on the formal agenda of the meeting, in itself a statement that the Zimbabwean crisis is now sufficiently serious to merit special attention. Not even the Commonwealth now buys into ZANU (PF)’s agenda.

Accordingly by the end of 2001 a broad coalition of the United States, the EU and the Commonwealth emerged. All are determined to ensure that Zimbabwe has free and fair Presidential elections. The only apparent source of comfort to ZANU (PF) was the statement issued by some SADC Ministers on the 12th December welcoming the “improved atmosphere” in Zimbabwe. ZANU (PF) has made much of this statement, which has led many to believe that SADC is going to look the other way and allow ZANU (PF) to abuse the electoral process. Whilst there is no doubt that some SADC countries, which are themselves undemocratic, support ZANU (PF) it would be wrong to assume that the SADC Ministers’ statement represents the views of the most influential countries in the region. It is pertinent to note that Ministers from Angola and Namibia dominated the SADC meeting and that Ministers from South Africa and Botswana left the meeting prior to its conclusion.

Indeed far from SADC looking the other way there are signs that democratic leaders in the region are increasingly concerned about Zimbabwe. Festus Mogae, the President of Botswana, openly criticized Mugabe and his war veterans in an interview in the Sunday Times on the 11th November. During the week commencing the 26th November President Mbeki spoke out against what was happening in Zimbabwe on no less than 3 separate occasions. On the 20th December a high ranking ANC delegation arrived in Harare for talks with ZANU (PF) and prior to its arrival the SABC announced that part of its mission was to secure free and fair elections. It is highly significant that neither party at the conclusion of the talks made any press release and save for one article in the Herald claiming, without any supporting statement from the ANC, that the ANC was in solidarity with ZANU (PF), the ZANU (PF) propaganda machine has been remarkably quiet about the visit. If anything, the government controlled media and Jonathan Moyo have spent most of December criticizing South Africa. In the December 18th edition of the Chronicle there was a vicious cartoon portraying Nelson Mandela as a lackey of Bush and Blair. In Parliament on the 18th December Jonathan Moyo said: “Those who see the likes of the BBC, CNN and SABC as voices of democracy are either naïve or plain mad”. Subsequently Moyo stated in a press conference that the South African media were still under the control of apartheid forces. Throughout December there was a sustained attack on the ANC in the Herald implying that it was now being influenced by, and had sold out to, the New Nationalist Party. Clearly ZANU (PF) now perceives the ANC as an enemy because it too is insisting on a fair electoral process.

The real test of who is in control of SADC and what the most powerful States in SADC think about the Zimbabwean situation will be shown when the SADC Heads of State meet in Malawi on the 13th January. Whatever happens there however what is now clear is that a very powerful coalition comprising the United States, the European Union, an overwhelming majority of democratic Commonwealth countries and the two most powerful neighbours of Zimbabwe, South Africa and Botswana, has emerged during the course of 2001. This coalition is determined to ensure that free and fair elections take place and has come to the conclusion that whilst the land issue is an important unresolved issue, the principal problem is the absence of good governance. The MDC now has the most powerful and influential countries on earth singing from the same hymn sheet as it and this particular hurdle is now firmly overcome. There will be no going back on the international community’s insistence that free and fair elections be held in compliance with the SADC Electoral Norms and Standards as passed by the SADC Parliamentary Forum in Windhoek in March 2001. ZANU (PF) will only snub that insistence at its peril.

One final thought: once a politician, or a political party for that matter, is marked as a pariah the stain is indelible. There is now nowhere for Mugabe to hide. Either he complies with the international community and holds elections in compliance with the SADC Standards, in which case he will lose by a mile, or he does not, in which case if he manages to win the result will not be recognized by the countries which count in the region and the world in any event.

Support Of The People

Of course it doesn’t matter what the international community thinks if an overwhelming majority of people within the country concerned back the policies of its government. History shows us that regimes which enjoy the backing of a significant majority of its people, can ride the storm of international opprobrium for some time, especially if they have strong economies. Zimbabwe, to put it mildly, does not have a strong economy and so if Mugabe is to fly in the face of world opinion he will need the support of a significant majority, not just to win the election but also to endure the hardship of international isolation.

In the run up to the 2000 Parliamentary election I speculated about three possible scenarios. The first, and most negative from an MDC perspective, was that the MDC would win a majority of seats in the cities but because of intimidation would only win a smattering of rural seats and as a result would only win about 30 seats countrywide. The second was that the MDC would win convincingly in the cities and in certain rural areas that were traditionally anti ZANU (PF) and would garner between 50 and 60 votes. The third was that the MDC would win the cities and all rural areas aside from ZANU (PF)’s heartland and in doing so would win a Parliamentary majority of between 80 and 90 seats. In all my talks given at the time I believed that the second scenario was the most likely. The reason I mention this is that at the time I did not make outlandish predictions. I firmly believed, from the evidence before me at the time that ZANU (PF)’s intimidation of certain areas was still effective and as a result we could not win in those areas. Furthermore it was apparent that ZANU (PF) was still sufficiently unified to retain substantial support in its heartland.

From the evidence before me now I believe that, despite intimidation, electoral fraud and dirty tricks, there could well be a landslide victory in favour of MDC President Morgan Tsvangirai. I say so for the following reasons:

  1. The MDC and Morgan Tsvangirai are now known and respected by both Zimbabweans and the international community (including SADC) whereas in 2000 they were not. The MDC came from ground zero to win 57 seats and 46% of the vote. That was achieved without a single elected structure in the party aside from the National Executive. The people of Zimbabwe now know there is a viable alternative government in waiting comprised of a young dynamic leadership committed to non-violence and the establishment of a genuinely democratic order.
  2. The MDC’s overwhelming support in urban areas is rock solid. The 82% majority achieved in the Bulawayo Mayoral election will be repeated in Harare, Gweru and Mutare. The recent victory in the Chegutu Mayoral election (right in ZANU (PF)’s heartland – and it is important to recall that we lost the Parliamentary seat in Chegutu in 2000, so we have gained ground) shows just how extensive our support is in urban areas.
  3. The MDC’s overwhelming support in the rural areas of Matabeleland has grown since the 2000 elections. Matabeleland North Province voted “Yes” (in favour of ZANU (PF)) in the February 2000 referendum and it was somewhat of a surprise when the MDC won every seat in the Province in June 2000. The reason for the surprise is that people in the Province suffered the brunt of the North Korean trained Fifth Brigade’s brutality in the 1980s. It is a Province still traumatized by those horrors. ZANU (PF) threatened a return of the Fifth Brigade in 2000 but it did not work. Since then ZANU (PF) has not been able to carry out its threat. Whilst ZANU (PF) has deployed army in the area to intimidate people they simply cannot afford to replicate the actions of the 5 Brigade because we live in a changed world – and the people living there know it. From information coming in to the MDC the rural people of Matabeleland will vote even more convincingly for President Tsvangirai than they did for individual MDC candidates. Let it not be forgotten as well that they also have far more reason to vote against Mugabe than they did against individual ZANU (PF) candidates. Mugabe after all is perceived by voters in the region as the architect of the 1980 atrocities.
  4. People living in the southern part of Midlands Province have a very similar outlook to those living in rural Matabeleland. That was demonstrated in the June 2000 elections when the MDC won all the Midlands seats south west of Kadoma. That support remains secure. In addition we are greatly encouraged by growing levels of support in the south east of Midlands including Zvishavane and areas bordering Masvingo Province (for reasons which will be explained later). We lost some of these constituencies heavily in 2000 and so the turn around in support has been remarkable. The only part of Midlands which remains problematic is the north west, the Gokwe area which has been heavily intimidated by ZANU (PF). But even there courageous MDC activists are holding the line and we will, at the very least, pick up the same number of votes we did in 2000, even if that is not a majority in those areas.
  5. In June 2000 we won all the seats in Manicaland along the eastern border by comfortable majorities save for Chipinge South, which was won by the ZANU Ndonga party. ZANU Ndonga, which up until his death in December 2000 was led by veteran Nationalist Ndabaningi Sithole, has held the Chipinge South seat with a large majority for over a decade. When Sithole died he should have been buried in Heroes Acre in Harare because of the major role he played in the liberation of Zimbabwe. However because of Mugabe’s vindictive and petty nature he was not and so was buried in the Chipinge district, Mugabe did not, obviously, attend the funeral but MDC President Tsvangirai did. In doing so Mugabe lost a great deal of support to Tsvangirai in this area (the two Chipinge seats have approximately 100,000 eligible voters between them). It is doubtful that ZANU Ndonga will even field a Presidential candidate. The MDC lost the western Manicaland seats by narrow majorities, including of course President Tsvangirai’s Buhera North seat (a loss subsequently set aside by the High Court due to irregularities). Since June 2000 MDC support in most of these areas has grown dramatically and, for example, President Tsvangirai is attracting massive crowds to his rallies in Buhera. In other words it now appears that the known quantity (see paragraph 1 above!) is now overwhelmingly popular. And finally who would criticize a bit of parochialism in these areas if they were to vote for a homeboy for President of Zimbabwe?! Whilst it does not always work – Al Gore lost in Tennessee – all the indications are that Manicaland Province will vote overwhelmingly for a local candidate as Texas did for George Bush.
  6. The three Mashonaland rural Provinces are ZANU (PF)’s heartland as demonstrated by their by-election victories there during 2001. It would be overly optimistic to expect President Tsvangirai to win a majority of votes in these Provinces which combined have a total of some 1,4 million registered voters. However what was significant about the 2001 by-elections is that the MDC despite violence, bussing in of ZANU (PF) voters (which cannot be done as successfully in the Presidential elections) and electoral fraud, still managed to secure some 40% of the vote. Simple arithmetic shows that even if this trend continues Mugabe’s 60% of the vote in these areas, say 840000 votes, will almost be set off entirely by Tsvangirai’s vote in Harare alone (80% of the 800000 registered voters = 640000). But there are recent signs that Mugabe cannot even be assured of maintaining the margin enjoyed in 2000. The MDC victory in Chegutu must have stunned Mugabe for Chegutu is in Mashonaland West Province and only some 50 kms from Mugabe’s rural home – one can’t get much closer to the heart than that. The point is that even if Mugabe does secure a majority, even an overwhelming majority, in these areas it is simply not enough to overcome the deficit he faces in other areas.
  7. I have deliberately left the most heavily populated rural Province, Masvingo, until last. In 2000 the MDC won only 2 seats, Masvingo Central, an urban seat, and surprisingly Bikita West, a rural seat, the latter by a whisker. Bikita West was lost by the MDC to ZANU (PF) in a violent and fraudulently run by-election in January 2001 but, importantly, maintained its core support in that by-election. The MDC also won the Masvingo City Mayoral election in mid 2001. However in most of the Masvingo seats contested in 2000 the MDC lost fairly heavily. Things have however changed and once again Mugabe is his own worst enemy. Eddison Zvobgo is a veteran Nationalist politician and a ZANU (PF) stalwart. Prior to 2000 ZANU (PF) used to boast that Masvingo Province was “one party territory” and it would be fair to say that Zvobgo was the linchpin of the Province, if not its “King”. Zvobgo to this day remains highly popular throughout Masvingo Province. However Mugabe inexplicably dropped Zvobgo from the cabinet and from the ZANU (PF) politburo in 2000 and since then Zvobgo has been in ZANU (PF)’s political wilderness. Zvobgo has even been ridiculed in the government-controlled press. In the Chronicle dated 7th January 2002 a ZANU (PF) cabinet minister as “an absent child of the party”. These actions have clearly angered many people in Masvingo Province and it is doubtful that they will vote for Mugabe in the same numbers as voted for individual ZANU (PF) members in June 2000. For example Zvobgo alone secured some 14000 votes to secure his Masvingo South Constituency; Mugabe is hardly likely to secure similar support, if any at all, in that Constituency given the way he has treated Zvobgo. But it gets worse for Mugabe. A Gallup poll conducted late last year showed a massive swing in support towards the MDC and Tsvangirai and the results of that poll have been borne out by the superb turn out at rallies in the Province addressed by both MDC President Tsvangirai and Vice President Gibson Sibanda. It must be stressed that this is a Province of some 600,000 registered voters. Even with its support in 2000 ZANU (PF) only secured 48% of the vote countrywide. If Masvingo changes its allegiances even slightly in favour of Tsvangirai that will give him a landslide victory countrywide.

The net result of this painstaking exercise of going through the country Province by Province is that it demonstrates that the MDC and its President Tsvangirai now enjoy majority support in some two thirds of the physical area of Zimbabwe and the support of some three quarters of the population. If one takes a map of Zimbabwe and one draws a line eastwards starting at Lake Kariba, on the north eastern boundary of Binga constituency, continuing up the eastern boundary of Gokwe in a north westerly direction to eventually encircle Harare, continuing in a southerly direction (to exclude Chikomba Constituency) and thereafter northeastwards to end at the Mozambique border north of Nyanga, one will see the extent of MDC’s support. An overwhelming majority of people who live south of that line now supports the MDC and President Tsvangirai. Everything below that line includes all the cities and most of the rural areas. North of the line only includes the Gokwe area of Midlands Province and the three rural Mashonaland Provinces.

In the face of this, and only just over two months away from the Presidential election, all ZANU (PF) has to offer the people is violence. ZANU (PF)’s principal campaign platform of land to the people has been exposed for what it is, a sham. During the Christmas recess I have personally witnessed in two entirely separate areas, hundred of kilometres apart, occupiers having moved off land already occupied to plant crops in their communal land fields. Whilst that is obviously not the case countrywide even taking ZANU (PF)’s distorted figures only some 100,000 people have “benefited” from the so-called fast track land programme. Even those have simply been dumped on land without being given title, without the provision of water, schools, clinics and roads. In other words the vast majority of the some 6 million eligible voters have not benefited one iota from what is the nub of ZANU (PF)’s platform, indeed they are struggling more than ever before. In recent weeks it has emerged that many of the best farms have been reserved for Mugabe’s cronies. So much for “land to the people”!

ZANU (PF) has simply not addressed the key issue that is affecting everyone in the country, namely the collapsing economy and increasing poverty. Ironically even the ZANU (PF) campaign advertisements published in the last few days acknowledge this: “Say no to artificial shortages!” – “Vote for price controls!” The advertisements are an admission that under Mugabe’s government there are shortages and high prices which need controlling. Hardly a great reason to vote for the person responsible!

Finally violence is increasingly counter-productive for ZANU (PF). The people of Zimbabwe have simply had enough and their level of anger now far surpasses their level of fear. In short they simply want a change and a new start, not the same old man for another 6 years. And for those who agree with my assessment but who fear that the election will be rigged let me say the following. Rigging the election is undoubtedly part of Mugabe’s plan but can only succeed if the margin is only a few tens of thousand votes. There were strange figures that came out of some of the rural Mashonaland rural constituencies in 2000 where the ZANU (PF) vote appeared to have been bolstered. However even with that rigging ZANU (PF) had a deficit of some 70,000 votes against the combined total of the opposition. We are now two years on and the actual margin of defeat for Mugabe is going to be much more than 70,000 (it will be hundreds of thousands if Masvingo Province votes either for Tsvangirai or simply does not vote at all). A deficit of several hundred thousand votes makes rigging enormously difficult.

A final word is necessary regarding the mood of the Zimbabwean people. The MDC has, in the last few weeks, brought a succession of cases to the High Court to level the playing field. As a result of these cases we have managed to get the numbers of new prospective voters who have registered. There are some 700,000 new registrations! One of the arguments advanced by the Registrar General’s office for their inability to supply us with a copy of the voters’ roll was because they had only managed to process to date some 80,000 of these new registrations! Rest assured that the vast majority of these 700,000 new voters are not particularly happy with the present regime and they have not registered for fun. Why else do you think government has made it so difficult for people to register? The people are ready.

The Candidate

The people being ready is one thing; having a decent candidate to vote for is another thing entirely. Which leads me to the coup de grace in the form of Morgan Tsvangirai. Whilst I have known MDC President Tsvangirai since 1992 I have only got to know him well since being invited by him to join the MDC in 1999. Getting to know him has been a sheer pleasure. He is a man of great intellect, integrity, courage, compassion and humour. In fact I firmly believe that in Mr. Tsvangirai we have a truly great leader who will become a statesman of world renown. I have been consistently impressed by his wisdom in tackling tricky issues and by his commitment to a vision of a non-racist, non-sexist, democratic Zimbabwe.

It is hard to convey why I have so much admiration for Tsvangirai. A few random examples of his character may help. When our child Bethany was born in September Tsvangirai took time off his hectic schedule to phone me to say “makorokoto” (Shona for congratulations). When I was concerned in November by the death threats I had received, a meeting with him restored my equilibrium. When some of our younger members went over the top in campaigning for positions last year in Harare, bringing the MDC into disrepute, Tsvangirai dealt with the issue quickly, resolutely but fairly and put the party back on track. When he was ambushed twice last year he remained absolutely calm and focused. He does not have an ounce of racist blood in his veins. He is truly a great leader and Zimbabwe will be blessed to have him as President.

Some skeptics may argue that my own experience is all very well but Tsvangirai is not known by the Zimbabwean people and we may well end up like the Zambians, lumped with a President very few people want. After all, the people of Zambia were also ready for change. Over 80% of those eligible to vote turned out to vote in the recently held Parliamentary and presidential elections. Over 70% of those who voted, voted against the so-called ruling party candidate, Levy Mwanawasa. The will of the people was denied however because, despite all the opposition’s claims of rigging, even on the Zambian government’s own figures Mwanawasa won with only 28,7% of the vote. The dreaded “Kenya syndrome”, namely the inability of the opposition to coalesce around a single candidate, did in the Zambian people. The “Kenya syndrome” is more likely to occur in countries where ethnicity is a major factor or where the opposition is unable to produce a single candidate who stands head and shoulders above the rest of the opposition candidates. The latter problem is exacerbated when a good opposition candidate does not have the backing of a strong party behind him or her.

Fortunately Zimbabwe does not suffer from any of these blights. Ethnicity will not be a factor in our elections as far as the MDC is concerned. The MDC team of President Tsvangirai and Vice President Sibanda attracts support countrywide and in both urban and rural settings. Ndebele people have thronged President Tsvangirai’s meetings in Matabeleland in 2001 and Shona people have done the same for Vice President Sibanda in meetings held recently in, for example, Zaka in Masvingo. If anyone will have a problem attracting support from specific ethnic groups it will be Mugabe whose chickens are coming home to roost. Mugabe will battle to attract support in regions he has alienated such as Matabeleland, Masvingo and Manicaland. Indeed Mugabe was the best candidate ZANU (PF) could have offered the MDC because he is so intensely disliked by various ethnic groups throughout the country. We were absolutely delighted that the ZANU (PF) Congress decided to stick with the soon-to-be-78 year old Mugabe. The problem for ZANU (PF) is compounded in Matabeleland in that his only possible Ndebele Vice President running mates, Msika or John Nkomo, did not even dare to contest seats in Matabeleland in the 2000 elections cognizant of their inability to win. Both are deeply unpopular in Matabeleland in stark contrast to Vice President Gibson Sibanda who won his seat with a majority of over 80%.

What then of the prospect of multiple candidates from other parties as happened in Zambia? In the 2000 elections ZANU (PF) secured 48% of the vote, the MDC 46% and the balance went to a variety of small opposition parties, the main one being ZANU Ndonga which secured the only other opposition seat of Chipinge South. There are only three other political parties of any consequence namely, the UANC led by Bishop Muzorewa, ZAPU and the Liberty Party (both regional parties based in Bulawayo). All three attracted minimal votes and many of their candidates lost their deposits in the 2000 elections. ZANU (PF) has been desperately trying to promote candidates from these parties and it has been intriguing to see how, for example, the government controlled Chronicle newspaper in Bulawayo has been promoting the fortunes of Paul Siwela, the Secretary General of ZAPU who appears to have desires to contest the Presidential election. His plans to contest were dealt a bit of a blow when the ZAPU Central Committee recently decided that it would not field a candidate in the election. Since that decision was taken the Chronicle has done its utmost to discredit Agrippa Madlela, the ZAPU President who, one would have thought, would be ZAPU’s logical candidate, but who believes that ZAPU should not contest the election.

The same tactic is being employed, with similar lack of success, to get Wilson Khumbula MP to stand as ZANU Ndonga’s Presidential candidate. Khumbula until recently was the President of ZANU Ndonga. He has been suspended from the party and there are strong indications that ZANU Ndonga will not want to field a candidate. So despite ZANU (PF)’s best efforts to split the opposition vote by assisting the campaigns of a multiplicity of opposition candidates they will not succeed. If anything President Tsvangirai will pick up votes from the supporters of these small parties, especially from the largest of them all, ZANU Ndonga. In sum this will in essence be a two horse race. In any event our electoral laws are different to Zambia in that in Zimbabwe the winning candidate has to win a majority of votes cast and if a majority is not achieved in the first ballot then the two top candidates have to contest a second ballot against each other. So at the end of the day this will be a straight contest between Tsvangirai and Mugabe.

Another important reason why the opposition vote will not be split sufficiently to usher Mugabe back into power by default is because, in MDC President Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe has got a charismatic candidate the opposition and civil society can coalesce around. Having been a highly successful Secretary General of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) prior to his election as President of the MDC, Tsvangirai has a very high and positive profile that transcends the ethnic, class, racial and gender divide. My personal experience of Tsvangirai is shared by hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans countrywide. In a word he is Presidential and it is not hard for Zimbabweans to conceive that he would be a good President. Even if other opposition candidates do stand none will have the presence or profile of Tsvangirai.

But it is the backing of an effective party that is the most compelling reason why our election will be different to the Zambian election. The MDC since its formation in September 1999 has been subjected to a literal baptism of fire at the hands of ZANU (PF) and its surrogate police force and CIO. We have now had over 90 of our supporters murdered by ZANU (PF) thugs; virtually every single MDC MP has been either detained, or assaulted, or had his or her house searched, or received death threats. The MDC has been subjected to the most bizarre selective application of the law. Charges have been fabricated against MDC leaders and prosecuted vigorously whereas ZANU (PF) leaders who openly advocate murder are not even arrested. The electronic media is brazenly the mouthpiece of ZANU (PF). And so it goes on. But the reality is that, despite all of this harassment (in fact perhaps because of the harassment) the MDC is now stronger than it was in June 2000. Not only do we now have elected structures countrywide but also we now have the capacity and ability to govern.

Unlike ZANU (PF) which is trapped in its one-track mind of its disastrous “fast track land programme” the MDC has developed comprehensive policies to turn Zimbabwe around. President Tsvangirai has spent the last six months progressively unveiling the MDC’s economic, health, education and labour policies (to mention a few). All these policies have been formulated in consultation with experts from the relevant sectors of Zimbabwean society and have been hailed by serious commentators within Zimbabwe. The MDC has unveiled a three-year recovery plan that President Tsvangirai will start to implement as soon as he has been inaugurated in April.

But the MDC is more than just a body with good structures and policies – most importantly it has spirit! I have just had the pleasure of attending the MDC’s Annual Conference that was held in Gweru on the 22nd December. I have three words to describe the Conference: joyous, hilarious and constructive! There was absolute (and heartfelt) agreement that Morgan Tsvangirai and Gibson Sibanda shall comprise our Presidential team unlike the deep divisions within the ZANU (PF) camp regarding Mugabe’s candidacy. Most of the meeting was devoted to debating and agreeing on key policy issues such as tackling the economy, dealing effectively with the Aids pandemic and restoring the rule of law unlike the ZANU (PF) Congress which only seemed to discuss Mugabe’s declaration of war on the Zimbabwean people. In stark contrast to the tone of the ZANU (PF) meeting prayer and a recommitment to the principle of non-violence marked the MDC Conference. As a white Zimbabwean I felt profoundly privileged to be part of the proceedings of a movement that is non-racist and has a vision for not only a new democratic Zimbabwe but also a new beginning for Africa. I feel excited about the prospect of serving under Morgan Tsvangirai’s Presidency.

The Final Lap

I have always said that this battle to bring genuine democracy to Zimbabwe would not be easy and that the more cornered Mugabe and ZANU (PF) felt the more vicious they would become. That holds true now more than ever before and we are under no illusions how tough this final stretch will be. But we are now on the final lap. Before the end of this week Mugabe is obliged, in terms of the Electoral Act, to announce the date of the election. The election has to be held by the 17th March and Mugabe’s present term of office expires, come what may, State of Emergency or none, at midnight on the 31st March. In other words as I write the election is less than 70 days, or 10 weeks away.

Anyone who has run a marathon will tell you that the final few kilometers are the hardest; every joint aches and one cannot believe that one will finish, but finish we will, and that is all we have to do now. The international community now understands clearly what is going on in Zimbabwe and will do all in its power to assist the transition to democracy. The people are ready, silently and patiently waiting to cast their ballots. And finally the next President of Zimbabwe, Morgan Tsvangirai, is ready. All we have to do is to make sure that we are registered and ready and able to vote in March.

Many people ask in meetings whether Mugabe will allow President Tsvangirai to take office once he wins pointing to Mugabe’s oft repeated statement that the MDC and President Tsvangirai will “never, ever” govern. Not only has Mugabe not learnt from Zimbabwe’s own recent history (Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith said there would “never be majority rule in a thousand years” only to be proved wrong a short time after making that statement), but he also commits the terrible mistake of assuming that he is god and able to guide the course of history. History is replete with examples of dictators who believe that they will rule forever. In just the last 60 years Mussolini, Hitler, Idi Amin, Ceuscescu, Mobutu and Milosovic spring to mind. All had grand plans, all were extremely vicious and irrational at the end, but all were swept from power. Mugabe can plan as much as he likes but ultimately he has to deal with the people and God.

I will conclude by quoting verses from my favourite book of the Bible. These verses from Isaiah 40 have sustained me for many years:

“Do you not know? Have you not heard? Has it not been told you from the beginning? Have you not understood since the earth was founded?
He stretches out the heavens like a canopy, and spreads them out like a tent to live in.
He brings princes to naught and reduces the rulers of this world to nothing.
No sooner are they planted, no sooner are they sown, no sooner do they take root in the ground, than he blows on them and they wither, and a whirlwind
sweeps them away like chaff.

Do you not know? Have you not heard?
The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He will not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom.
He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.
Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall;
But those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
They will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”

It is not easy being in the middle of a whirlwind as this dictatorship is swept away and I understand fully how many in Zimbabwe, especially those in the farming community, feel completely at the end of their tether. But I believe with all my being that if we remain steadfast, do what is right and trust in the good Lord we will be sustained and our strength will be renewed sufficiently to see us through this transition to democracy. God bless you and keep you all this New Year.

David Coltart MP
7th January 2002.

The views expressed in this letter do not necessarily reflect the views of the MDC.

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David Coltart and Human Rights in Zimbabwe

Background Statement

David Coltart was elected to Zimbabwe’s parliament in June 2000, representing the Bulawayo South constituency for the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), and became MDC spokesperson for legal affairs. For eighteen years prior to entering parliament he was an outspoken advocate for human rights and had emerged as one of the leading human rights lawyers in Southern Africa.

David Coltart’s political career is rooted in his activities as a human rights activist. As Chairperson of the Bulawayo Legal Projects Centre (BLPC), a non-governmental human rights organization, he has run a number of legal advice centers for the disadvantaged in the Matabeleland region, where Bulawayo is the main city. The BLPC is actively involved in public interest legislation, and has been responsible for a number of landmark constitutional decisions handed down by the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe. Mr. Coltart is a leading figure in several other human rights organizations in Zimbabwe, including the Legal Resources Foundation. The law firm where he was a senior partner, Webb, Low and Barry in Bulawayo, also had an extensive practice in the public interest field. His popularity in his Bulawayo constituency, where he defeated former Home Affairs minister, Dumiso Dabengwa, in the 2000 elections derives, in part, from his position as a respected human rights advocate and lawyer.
David Coltart’s human rights activism began in his days as a student in Zimbabwe and at the University of Cape Town in South Africa. He has since played a leading role in human rights promotion throughout the region. Earlier this year, he met with Human Rights First staff to promote cooperation between Human Rights First and Zimbabwean NGOs on the protection and welfare of refugees and displaced persons in southern and central Africa. Between 1984 and 1986, he worked closely with Human Rights First researchers in producing the report, Zimbabwe: Wages of War, which described serious violations of human rights in Matabeleland, in south-western Zimbabwe.

The increasing authoritarianism of the Mugabe government presents a direct threat to human rights in Zimbabwe. As the ruling Zanu PF party’s grip on power has started to slip, the government has moved ruthlessly to suppress dissent, and the growing challenge from the opposition MDC. According to the constitution, presidential elections must be held in Zimbabwe prior to the end of March 2002. There is growing speculation that rather than subject himself to a democratic contest, which he may well lose, President Mugabe will declare a state of emergency, suspend the constitution and postpone the elections.

The worsening human rights situation has already started to undermine the independence of the judiciary. Senior judges have been threatened and intimidated, and the government sometimes disregards court rulings. Journalists have been imprisoned, threatened and assaulted as the freedom of the press has come under attack. Human rights defenders are also the targets of threats and intimidation.
At a state funeral for Cain Nkala, murdered leader of the Bulawayo war veterans association, on November 19, 2001, President Mugabe branded the democratic opposition as terrorists. His supporters in the crowd carried banners saying, “Kill the Terrorists.” MDC leaders have denied any involvement in the death of Mr. Nkala, and have called for his killers to be apprehended and brought to justice. The ruling party appears to be exploiting the incident to further polarize an already volatile situation, and to incite violence against the MDC and other independent government critics.

Zimbabwe is on the brink of descending into catastrophic political violence that would threaten instability throughout the region. Now more than ever, the country is in need of the work of human rights defenders like David Coltart, who provide an alternative to conflict through patient dedication to defending the rule of law and basic freedoms.

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