NEWS - NAMIBIA
| 2013-08-05
Zimbabwe’s MDC struggles for survival
COFFIN ... Supporters of Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe carry a coffin enact- ing opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s mock funeral while celebrating Mugabe’s recent election victory in Mbare yesterday. Mugabe was declared the winner of a controversial presidential election with 2,1 million votes, giving him 61% of the total and his challenger Prime Min- ister Morgan Tsvangirai 34% amid allegations of blatant vote rigging. Nampa-Reuters
•STELLA MAPENZAUSWA
HARARE – Zimbabwe’s opposition Movement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai (MDC-T) party, shocked by its overwhelming election defeat, has a battle on its hands to convince supporters it has any chance of taking power in the years to come.
The party’s survival may depend on a shake-up of its leadership, which many say was naive in entering a four-year unity government with President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF after a decade of acrimony and conflict.
State media is already sounding the death knell for the party led by former trade unionist Morgan Tsvangirai, who since 1999 has been the only man to have offered serious opposition to Zanu-PF - until his hammering in the July 31 polls.
“Morgan Tsvangirai’s 15 minutes of fame have come to a spectacular end. It was bound to happen,” the pro-Mugabe Sunday Mail crowed in an editorial.
As Tsvangirai (61) prepares to launch a legal challenge to a poll he says was heavily rigged, analysts are asking why his party participated in an exercise it said was riddled with flaws from the outset.
A visibly angry Tsvangirai told reporters on Saturday he would go to court to overturn the result, which gave Zanu-PF a two-thirds majority in parliament.
At least 61% of the voters endorsed the 89-year-old Mugabe for another five-year term as president, against 34 percent for Tsvangirai, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission said.
Desperation
Tsvangirai’s denunciation of the vote as a “huge farce” smacked of desperation by a man “profoundly shocked by having had the rug pulled out from under his feet”, said Piers Pigou of the International Crisis Group, a political think-tank.
“The bottom line is that the MDC formations signed up for this,” he said. “They have been outmanoeuvred again. One could ask what on earth made them think you could trust the process in the first place.”
Tsvangirai and other senior MDC-T leaders face accusations that they lost touch with the plight of ordinary Zimbabweans while enjoying the perks of being in a unity government formed in 2009 in the aftermath of another disputed election.
The election loss will also re-ignite debate on Tsvangirai’s fitness to continue leading the party in the wake of a string of sex scandals that called his morals into question.
Over the last five years as prime minister Tsvangirai has swapped the modest gear he donned at rallies in the party’s fledgling years for sharp suits and gleaming shoes that suggest he is enjoying the same lavish livestyle as his nemesis.
“Tsvangirai took all his support for granted - that they would never desert him no matter what he did, no matter how badly he behaved,” said political analyst Denford Magora, an outspoken Tsvangirai critic.
“In the end, no matter what accusations of rigging are thrown at Zanu-PF, the truth of the matter is that there is no way out for the MDC-T this time.”
With African observers largely unanimous in endorsing the elections as free and credible, the MDC-T will struggle to rally regional support behind it in its bid to overturn the result and pave the way for a re-run.
Mugabe’s last election?
The party might do well to focus its energies instead on the next elections in 2018 which Mugabe, who has towered over Zimbabwean politics since independence from Britain in 1980, will almost certainly be too old at 94 to contest.
The MDC-T might learn from the example of Mugabe’s Zanu-PF, which regrouped to revitalise its support base ahead of this year’s poll after narrowly escaping defeat in 2008, said political analyst Eldred Masunungure.
“Presently the MDC-T is in denial, and justifiably so but its future depends on what it does once it recovers. It needs to remobilise the people and reconnect with the grassroots,” added Masunungure, a lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe.
“It is high time it tried to rejuvenate the leadership. After this kind of electoral tsunami you cannot rest on your laurels. That would be disastrous.”
Analysts have suggested MDC-T secretary-general Tendai Biti, the outgoing finance minister in the unity government, as a possible successor to Tsvangirai.
But Biti, a lawyer by profession, might be too much of an intellectual to draw the kind of working class support Tsvangirai enjoyed in his urban stronghold.
“Tendai Biti is very able but Morgan is the one with the appeal and I still think that he’s right person for the party,” said Sarah Hudleston, author of ‘Face of Courage: A Biography of Morgan Tsvangirai’.
“He made a mistake going into a joint government to start with, but I think the MDC-T will survive. He must now go back to being an opposition politician.”
– Nampa-Reuters
Comments
What a nonsense of Mugabe supporters - people without a vision - all rotten in their head. what a blind supporter group of imbeciles, empty tins so to say. idiots. - American Dube
the truth about African politics and democracy is that, no opposition have ever won a case of rigged election and no ruling party have ever allowed that to happen regardless of clear rigging of some sort. i think democracy in africa is still to come, counting 30 to 50 years from now. - botha