Ruth Weiss: Zimbabwe before the elections (12)
COLUMN 12
It's a date! The referendum on the constitution passed by Parliament
will be held tentatively on March 19th.. Elections are expected to
follow in July. At the same time the resignation of Simpson
Mutambanengwe as head of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC)
has been announced, due to health reason.(1) MDC-T's demand of
changes in ZEC's secretariat are resisted by Zanu-PF.(2) The job
of aligning existing laws with the constitution has to be completed
by June 29th, the last day of the current Parliamentary session.
(3)
UNDP has now approved funding of the referendum and election
exercise, though no figure has been given.(4) )In view of the need
for outside funding, it is puzzling that ministers of the three
coalition parties are demanding luxury vehicles and expensive houses
as exit presents. Seemingly greed is not any party's monopoly.(5)
A media conference on February 17 on the constitution will be
addressed by both President Robert Mugabe and MDC leader Morgan
Tsvangirai. Opinions differ, from the National Constitutional
Assembly's Lovemore Madhuku denouncing the constitution as "coming
from on high instead of the people" to MDC's Priscilla
Misihairabwi-Mushonga acknowledging the proposals "are not perfect"
but a great improvement on the present constitution.
As always, it comes down to Mugabe: by limiting the presidential
reign to two terms, the new constitution ensures that the country
won't be saddled with a second Mugabe.(6) However, critical voices
claim the executive still wields too much power.
A South African Court has ordered the SA Presidency to hand over
a report on Zimbabwe's 2002 elections, which had been kept under
wraps and which is believed to show the election was irregular.(7)
Fears exist that elections without security sector and media reforms
may lead to a repeat of the 2008 situation. On February 10 Zanu-PF
failed to turn up at a meeting with the South African team on the
issue, attended only by the two MDCs.(8) Human Rights Watch said
there was no guarantee that Zanu-PF will cease its repressive
practices. Intimidation, violence and unfair arrests are daily
occurrences (9)
Zanu-PF chairman Simon Khaya Moyo accused western government of
interference in Zimbabwes internal affairs by using NGOs.(10).
Presumably this is intended to excuse the ongoing clampdown on
civil society. ZimRights and its officers were formally charged
with conspiracy to commit voter registration forgery and related
charges, which they deny. Three officials are behind bars, others
are on bail.(11) The home of a Bindura MDC-T MP was raided and
840 radios seized, which he said were donations to the community
by a well-wisher.(12) The Zimbabwe Peace Project also suffered a
raid, with police allegedly searching for smuggled goods.(13)
Eight members of WOZA including its leader Jenni Williams were
beaten and tear-gassed during a peaceful anti-constitution demo in
Harare. The following day a group of WOZA Bulawayo demonstrators
were similarly assaulted.(14) Police critical of Zanu-PF face
problems. Asst, Inspector Collen Musorowegomo was jailed for 12
days "for involvement in politics", following his report critical
of police behavior in 2008.(15) A state witness in the long
drawn-out trial of a policeman's murder, failed to identify the 31
MDC supporters accused of the 2011 murder (16) Survivors of political
violence met in Zaka to plead for peaceful electioneering.(17)
Hundreds of students were evicted from students' residence because
of December demonstrations against corruption and other issues.(18)
According to the Zimbabwean UK, a senior army officer has issued
fake documents of residency for use by soldiers to enable registration
as voters.(19)
Vote-buying too continues, with Zanu-PF handing out residential
plots to Apostolic Church followers, with its potential of millions
of votes. The party had long been wooing the sect, with leaders
including Mugabe and Joice Mujuru appearing at gatherings dressed
in white robes.(20) Chiefs have been promised new cars by Local
Government Minister Ignatius Chombo.(21)
The Civil Society Monitoring Mechanism (CISOMM) criticised the
coalition government for failing to implement major Global Political
Agreement (GPA) provisions, as well as for poor service delivery
and human rights violation.(22) The public service has been awarded
a 5.3% pay rise to avert strikes.(23)
Zimbabwe has secured an Australian US$30m grant to improve water
and sanitary services in 14 small towns, which comes as a relief
to hard-pressed local authorities.(24)Harare has been bedeviled
with water and currently faces water rationing. Harare's Mayor has
indicated that the city's problems require long-term solutions.
(25). The country is currently experiencing heavy downpours.(26)
Rows have erupted in Bikita, Masvingo Province, where diamond and
other mineral finds were reported last year. War veterans and others
object to licenses issued to persons from outside the province.(27)
The troubles of RioZim's Renco Goldmine continued, with operations
drawing to a halt. The High Court ordered Tourism Minister Walter
Mzwembi and others to vacate the mine.(28) The Mining Ministry
announced the seizure of 28 hectares of unused land leased to
Zimplats. The company claimed it had not been advised of this
decision.(29) Companies were given two years to establish a platinum
refinery.(30) Both China and India, anxious to invest in Zimbabwe,
have signed major contracts to gain entry to lucrative sectors of
the economy.(31)
US$12m have been set aside for construction of an assembly hall to
accommodate the forthcoming UN World Tourism 20th general assembly,
due to be hosted jointly by Zambia and Zimbabwe.(32)
Perhaps the saddest comment on Mugabe's devastating policies
post-2000 is the recently announced O-Level results of some 82%
failure. At independence the new government expanded the inherited
education system to cover previously disadvantaged children by
providing free education. As a result, the country's literacy rate
rose to rate among the highest in Africa. As the latest exam results
show, this record has been eroded.(33)At its peak, the crisis closed
down schools due to lack of all necessities, including teachers.
- BBC 13.2, Reuters 13.2, SW Radio Africa 13.2
- Herald 9.2
- Daily News 13.2
- SW Radio Africa 12.2
- New Zimbabwe 7.1, Zim. Independent 8.2
- VOA Zimbabwe 8.2
- SW Radio Africa 14.2
- Daily News 14.2
- Zim Independent 8.2, VOA 8.2, Nehanda Radio 14.2
- VOA Zimbabwe 13.2
- VOA Zimbabwe 8.2
- VOA Zimbabwe 8.2
- SW Radio Africa 11.2
- SW Radio Africa 13.2, 14.2)
- Standard 10.2
- SW Radio Africa 12.2
- SW Radio Africa 12.2
- SW Radio Africa 11.2
- The Zimbabwean UK 13.2
- Nehanda Radio10.2
- Standard 10.2
- SW Radio Africa 13.2)
- New Zimbabwe 14.2
- VOA Zimbabwe 6.12
- Herald 6.12, Daily News 6.2, SW Radio 6.2
- Herald 14.2
- Zim.Independent 8.2
- Zim. Independent 8.2, New Zimbabwe 11.2
- http://wwww.iol.co.za, http://www.bdlive.ci.za
- Reuters 12.2)
- Mail and Guardian 8.2
- Zim Independent 8.2
- Zim. Independent 8.2
Letzte Änderung: Saturday, 16-Feb-2013 22:36:31 CET
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