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Published 4th July 2008

Vol 49 No 14


Zimbabwe

Deaths and deals

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures
Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

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The government sets tough terms for a power-sharing deal that might end the crisis

The election on 27 June was Zimbabwe's worst. The opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, had formally withdrawn but his name was still on the ballot paper (AC Vol 49 No 13). Few people bothered to vote. Even so, in some constituencies in Matebeleland, the combined number of spoiled ballots and votes for Tsvangirai outnumbered those for the unopposed President, Robert Mugabe.


Where the government gets its money

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

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Foreign mining investors still drop cash into Zimbabwe's empty bucket. Anglo American hit the spotlight in June with its US$400 million Unki platinum project, to be run by its Joha...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The African Union’s endorsement of ‘deal democracy’ this week may help resolve the Zimbabwean tragedy, but it reinforces the precedent set by regional mediators after Kenya’s election crisis in January. The message to an unpopular incumbent is clear: you can steal an election, hammer the opposition, then sit tight and shrug off the opprobrium. Finally, you can offer a power-sharing deal and stay on the throne – complete with international recognition and legal immunity. Too big, messy and e...
The African Union’s endorsement of ‘deal democracy’ this week may help resolve the Zimbabwean tragedy, but it reinforces the precedent set by regional mediators after Kenya’s election crisis in January. The message to an unpopular incumbent is clear: you can steal an election, hammer the opposition, then sit tight and shrug off the opprobrium. Finally, you can offer a power-sharing deal and stay on the throne – complete with international recognition and legal immunity. Too big, messy and expensive, power-sharing governments are tolerated by voters if they appear to be the last barrier against mass violence. The AU refused to sanction Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe as demanded by a younger generation of leaders in Botswana, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Kenya. Instead, they called on Zimbabwe’s leaders to seize the momentum offered by the latest turn of events. Translated, that means accepting South African President Thabo Mbeki’s formula for a government of national unity. That, Mugabe says, is what he was calling for in his hurried inauguration speech two days after his farcical re-election. For Morgan Tsvangirai and the opposition, that is a deal too far. They would accept a transitional government to promote reconciliation, oversee reforms and hold credible elections – but no free pass for Mugabe’s securocrats. If Zimbabweans can halt ‘deal democracy’ in its tracks, Africa will owe them a big favour.
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