In the News UK
Thursday, 29 May 2008
Robert Mugabe is waging a campaign of violence against the MDC. He is attempting to cling to power in Zimbabwe as pressure for change builds and builds.
Robert Mugabe is waging a campaign of intimidation and violence against Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), a senior party figure has claimed.
David Coltart, re-elected as a senator in the March 29th parliamentary elections, said Mr Mugabe’s supporters had committed “a fresh crime against humanity” in the last five weeks.
Increased abductions, displacements and the “gratuitous use of violence” all form part of the targeted campaign being conducted by Mr Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party since the first-round election.
That took place two months ago today and, after a lengthy delay, saw the MDC take control of the country’s parliament. The MDC’s Morgan Tsvangirai failed to win an absolute majority in the presidential contest, prompting the current run-off campaign and Mr Mugabe’s reign of terror.
Speaking at an event hosted by thinktank Policy Exchange in London, Mr Coltart compared the current crisis to the Gukuruhundi, the 1983 campaign which resulted in the deaths of 20,000 civilians.
The month after the election saw the number of human rights violations in Zimbabwe increase tenfold, he said, with second- and third-tier leadership levels of the MDC and the north-east of the country singled out for special attention.
“A new operation has unfolded. It is increasingly clear that Zanu-PF has organised a brutal campaign to root out people who voted for, or were in junior leadership positions in, the MDC under Morgan Tsvangirai,” Mr Coltart said.
By May 16th Harare hospital had treated 1,600 victims of the violence alone while 22 deaths among MDC supporters had been confirmed, he claimed. One man was found with his eyes gouged out and his tongue cut out.
“We face a very serious situation. These are the actions of a government which has thrown caution to the wind. The government will do anything to win the runoff,” Mr Coltart continued.
“[It is] a vicious plan of action designed to intimidate the electorate and destroy or at least disrupt party centres.”
Despite these problems the senior opposition figure, who co-founded the MDC but supported a separate faction to Mr Tsvangirai’s in the first-round poll, remains upbeat ahead of the second-round vote on June 27th.
He says the reunited MDC will command a substantial lead at the polls, with the eight per cent of voters backing third-placed candidate Simba Makoni expected to come across “en masse” for Tsvangirai.
The MDC also hopes to reverse low voter turnout in Harare, Bulawayo and other big urban centres, where disillusionment in the first round had seen less than a third of eligible voters turning out.
“We can easily make up the numbers. People now know why they need to end this nonsense,” Mr Coltart continued.
“This is primarily a psychological battle. The rank and file [in Zimbabwe’s police and military] simply cannot come out, but they understand… the only chance for the future is a change.”
Despite this optimism Mr Coltart admitted problems with voterigging are “far worse than ever” in the approach to the run-off.
A defective voter roll, the displacement of many MDC supporters to places where they cannot vote and a lack of free media are among the factors which make the elections “failed” in terms of being free and fair.
The larger diaspora problem, police routinely banning meetings and state resources only being made available to one party “excessively” add to the problems, Mr Coltart explained.
“The country is paralysed. It is very hard to convey how serious the human rights violations are and the impact this has had on the mood – there is a climate of fear in the country.”
The run-off takes place on June 27th.