Thursday 3 October 2019

"People are voting for Zanu PF notwithstanding hardship and repression" - repressed, per se, have no free will N Garikai

Professor Lovemore Madhuku, leader of the opposition party the National Constitution Assembly, should wash his mouth with bleach; the foul insults coming from him are intolerable. 

“Go to a by-election, you find that the majority of those who turn out to vote, vote for them notwithstanding the economic hardships, notwithstanding political repression. When next time around we have an election people must vote out this government that’s the way to go,” said Madhuku.

All the reputable election observers in last year’s elections have confirmed there was political coercion and other vote rigging problems. 

“Notably, major shortcomings in the pre-election environment impacted on the free expression of the will of electors, state resources were misused in favour of the incumbent and coverage by state media was heavily biased in favour of the ruling party,” stated the EU Election Mission final report. 

“Further, the electoral commission lacked full independence and appeared to not always act in an impartial manner. The final results as announced by the Electoral Commission contained numerous errors and lacked adequate traceability, transparency and verifiability. 

“Finally, the restrictions on political freedoms, the excessive use of force by security forces and abuses of human rights in the post-election period undermined the corresponding positive aspects during the pre-election campaign. As such, many aspects of the 2018 elections in Zimbabwe failed to meet international standards.”

What is infuriating here is that Madhuku and the rest of his fellow opposition politicians knew the elections were flawed and illegal, they knew ZEC had failed to produce something as basic as a verified voters’ roll although this was a legal requirement. Worse still, they also knew that by participating they will be giving some modicum of credibility to an otherwise illegal process as David Coltart readily admitted in his Book, The Struggle Continues 50 years of tyranny in Zimbabwe.

“The worst aspect for me about the failure to agree a coalition was that both MDCs couldn’t now do the obvious – withdraw from the (2013) elections,” wrote Senator Coltart.

“The electoral process was so flawed, so illegal, that the only logical step was to withdraw, which would compel SADC to hold Zanu PF to account. But such was the distrust between the MDC-T and MDC-N that neither could withdraw for fear that the other would remain in the elections, winning seats and giving the process credibility.”

Coltart was MDC minister in the 2008 to 2013 GNU; they failed to implement even one reform in five years although this was the primary purpose of the GNU. 

“We must invest heavily in conscientizing the majority of our people. I believe the only way forward for this country is to make people alert because despite what these people in government are doing they still enjoy support,” continued Madhuku. 


What we need is to warn our people against supporting corrupt and incompetent opposition politicians who have not only sold-out on implementing the reforms but are now participating in flawed and illegal elections and giving the process credibility. The sell-outs even have the chutzpah to  blame the people, the victims of their betrayal, for the rigged elections! 

3 comments:

  1. @ Paidamoyo Muzulu

    “Mnangagwa, boisterous after walloping the MDC in the 2018 disputed general elections, was long on promises and short on delivery when it came to the democratisation and economic revival agenda that he sold to both locals and the international community, claiming he was a reformist,” you said.

    The international community has never believed in Mnangagwa being able to deliver anything of substance and hence the reason they never lifted the sanctions and the much anticipated flood of investors has never happened. Mnangagwa failed to delivery on the promise to end corruption and, most telling of all, to hold free, fair and credible elections.

    Zimbabwe is still a pariah state ruled by corrupt, incompetent and vote rigging thugs. No one wants to do business in a pariah state.

    As long as Zimbabwe remains a pariah state, there will be no meaningful economic recovery.

    The way forward now is for Zanu PF to step down. MDC’s power sharing proposal is just a waste of time - no one will be fooled into believing the addition of MDC leaders is enough to transform the pariah state into a democratic one.

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  2. We cannot deny that Zimbabwe is in a serious economic and political mess. What most people have failed to fathom is why we are in this mess. Why, I do not know!

    The root cause of the economic and political mess is the decades of bad governance. Zimbabwe is not the first country to suffer from bad governance and so why should this be a mystery in this day and age and after 40 years of the same s***t.

    The international community has done the best they can to help Zimbabwe get out of this hell-hole of bad governance. SADC leaders helped craft the 2008 to 2013 Global Political Agreement which resulted in the GNU. All the nation had to do was implement the democratic reforms to dismantle the dysfunctional dictatorship. We failed to get even one reform implemented.
    Not one!

    Zimbabweans were warned not to take part in the elections with no meaningful reforms. We ignored the warnings in 2013 and again in 2018!

    The international community turned up like never before to observe the 2018 elections and they condemned the elections as flawed and illegal. They have produced detailed reports stating what was wrong.

    Zimbabweans have absolutely no excuse for not know that our problem is bad governance and not going anything to stop the rot by making sure we have free, fair and credible elections. ABSOLUTELY no excuse. NONE!

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  3. With the economy in free fall the doctors' strike are not going away soon. Indeed as long as we have a pariah state, we ain't seen nothing yet!

    ReplyDelete