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Brief
Update after the Zimbabwean Presidential Elections held
9-11 March, 2002
What
everyone dreaded, though didnt believe was possible,
has happenedMugabe has managed to steal the election.
How he did it is by an unbelievable and blatant demonstration
of utter contempt for anything that is just or fair. The
nation as a whole is still in a state of shock and utter
disbelief.
Church
umbrella bodies in Zimbabwe have rejected the results. The
EU,
Britain and the Commonwealth have rejected the result, as
has the USA. South Africa has kind of accepted them at the
time of writing which is a massive disappointment as it
is really only South Africa that can put the necessary pressure
on Mugabe to make him comply with even the most rudimentary
aspects of justice. The South African President has yet
to announce his own personal views on the issue. Should
he continue with the immoral support for Mugabe that is
leaking out of his government at this time, then it will
be clear that his great ambition is actually not an "African
Renaissance" but a "Renaissance of Oppression"ironic,
but true.
A
total of over 1400 opposition election monitors and support
group members had been arrested by the time the results
of the election were announced and this began the eve of
the election. The only explanation for this is that the
ruling party didnt want any eyes seeing what they
were doing. Violence and the threat of violence was terrible
and succeeded in chasing monitors and voters away from many
rural polling stations. In the capital, Harare, the amount
of polling stations were reduced by 40%, in the not so subtle
plan to prevent thousands of people from casting their vote.
In the end some people queued for days without even voting,
because the strategy was also to process as little 30 voters
an hour when there were thousands and thousands waiting
in each queue. This is not even going into the debacle and
manipulation of the voters roll and the electoral
act and the untold thousands that were disenfranchised in
that way. There were a number of cases too where polling
stations never appeared in the places it had been published
they would appear and many others appeared in places that
were unpublished. One polling station in the Manicaland
area was closed at 12 noon on the first day of polling by
"war veterans".
In
areas where Mugabe has had hardly any support for 22 years,
he suddenly recorded massive support. In areas where opposition
observes werent present (due to being arrested or
intimidated) there were near perfect turn outswith
huge numbers "voting" for Mugabe. With so few
independent observers allowed to monitor what was going
on and since there were so many places where the opposition
polling agents couldn't get to, Mugabe's forces did what
they wanted. The Secret police (CIO) made up most if not
all of the "Independent" Electoral Commission.
The ex head of Military intelligence was head of the Electoral
Supervisory Commission and the Chief Elections Officer was
an army Brigadier. The army and police transported the ballot
boxes from polling booths to counting centres and at times
arrested those who wanted to follow these ballot boxes to
the counting centres. Some counting centres were only monitored
government agents.
The
police sent out a signal (which a number of reputable people
saw), to
all police stations around the country on the second day
of voting ordering the police to arrest all opposition polling
agents and support group members and a flurry of arrests,
beatings, kidnappings and harassments followed. There are
reports that there have been 70 000 documented cases of
human rights abuses in the run-up to and during these elections.
Mugabe
said, even before the results were announced, that he would,
when re-elected, deal with the church leaders who opposed
him. He is yet to make his "victory" speech so
we don't know what his strategy is going to be--he has a
history of playing the gently dove for a season after an
election, but he might go straight on with his campaign
of terror without a break. The opposition are very angry
and have said that the courts (which are now stacked with
Mugabe's men) will not help so they are going to go for
a political answer, though we don't know what they mean
by that. The situationis very tense.
We
continue to trust our sovereign Lord. He knows what is best
and knows that to make us more like Christ, this is the
best route at this time. We continue to pray that we might
be found faithful and serve Christ by serving the many desperate
needs around us, for His glory and Kingdom. We continue
in faith mixed together with works. To God be all the glory.
Derek
Carlsen
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