Democracy dying in a land that lost hope
By Peta Thornycroft
(Filed: 31/03/2005)

Daily Telegraph

The lanky young man on the outer circle of the rally kept clutching at his
trousers which were too big around the waist and too short in the leg,
exposing limbs as thin as reeds.

His skin was stretched so tight across his cheekbones it was scuffed grey in
patches. He grinned, sang, and danced, taller than those around him, waving
long arms in the engaging open-palm sign of Zimbabwe's opposition Movement
for Democratic Change.


 




These non-Zanu PF villagers are denied grain 

He seemed happy, at least from a distance. He also had no shoes and his MDC
T-shirt looked worn enough to be a leftover from the country's last phoney
election in 2002, when President Robert Mugabe won six more years in power.

Standing a few yards away from people sitting under trees in dappled
afternoon sunlight were election observers from South Africa's African
National Congress, veterans of two democratic elections.

They were observing Zimbabwe's ninth national parliamentary or presidential
poll since independence in 1980. Then it was one of Africa's biggest food
producers; now it is impoverished, its people hungry, its land unproductive.


The election will almost certainly be rigged. The only question is whether
or not Mr Mugabe achieves the two-thirds majority he needs to change the
constitution and choose his successor.

The South Africans were obviously foreigners. Their skin glowed, their
fingers were smooth, their shoes and sunglasses and mobile phones set them
apart from the shabby crowd of about 700 who came to hear a message of hope
from their candidate at a village five hours' drive south-west of the
capital Harare. Mandla Dlamini, one of the observers from the ANC's election
unit in Johannesburg, said he was relieved that the pre-election period was
"peaceful". 


 

Robert Mugabe at a rally


The election will almost certainly be rigged in Mugabe's favour

I told him I was looking for a ruling Zanu PF rally in the area. He said the
police would help. I could only laugh at the suggestion that anyone would
willingly go to a police station.

"This is not 2002," he said. That's true, it isn't the 2002 elections, when
MDC supporters were hunted down like animals. The tactics are more subtle
this time.

But, Mr Dlamini, it is too soon to go into a police station. Since working
here for nearly four years as a reporter, I have met too many people who
only went because they had been arrested, including me.

Some were paying traffic fines or delivering food to imprisoned friends and
found themselves locked up for the weekend in cells designed by the British
for six inmates.

Now policemen shove in 30 at a time; the prisoners sleep standing in the
cell or in broken lavatories where water is flushed at the whim of a
policeman outside.

It will take longer than a few largely peaceful weeks for me or millions of
Zimbabweans to begin to trust Mr Mugabe's policemen again.

As a foreigner, Mr Dlamini wouldn't know when he drove later that day to the
second city Bulawayo that the grass in fields alongside the road should have
been shorter this time of year.

He wouldn't realise that it is tall - even after poor summer rain - because
there are no cattle left to eat it; that the occasional 100 sq yard patch of
maize along a 75-mile stretch of road is not enough to feed those who
attended the rally he had just "observed". 

More than the crumbling pavements and the potholes in what were some of
Africa's best roads, more than the uncollected rubbish stinking in the
streets and the decay consuming schools and hospitals, it is the desolation
and consequences of empty fields along familiar roads which hurts the most.

When Prince Charles lowered the Union flag 25 years ago Zimbabwe was edgy
and tense after a long and bitter guerrilla war led by Mr Mugabe. He calmed
white Rhodesians by offering to forget that they had locked him up for 10
years because he wanted to vote.

It was white farmers and their workers, encouraged by Mr Mugabe to remain,
who provided the engine to generate economic stability that allowed Zimbabwe
to be a new hope in Africa. 

But before long Mr Mugabe had already begun killing his first enemies: the
people of Matabeleland. After crushing them, he turned on white farmers, a
convenient scapegoat in Africa, especially as they did own a
disproportionate amount of land. 

They would be blamed for helping to create the MDC, as if millions of black
Zimbabweans couldn't decide for themselves that they wanted a world beyond
Robert Mugabe. So he began killing them too, and chasing them off their
farms.

My mobile phone has rung too often for too long with people who have nowhere
else to turn to and I can't do anything to help.

My phone rang a few minutes ago. A young South African woman from an
unofficial observer group has been attacked on a bus 45 miles from Harare.

She was sobbing in the background as a contact told me her story; that Zanu
PF men beat her up and tried to rape her.

I will try to find Mr Dlamini and tell him. There is no point going to the
police.

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