Author Topic: Mugabe 'The Dictator' Stays for Now  (Read 1077 times)

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Offline Dan

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Mugabe 'The Dictator' Stays for Now
« on: June 22, 2008, 08:58:02 PM »
HARARE, Zimbabwe —  Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out of Zimbabwe's violence-wracked presidential runoff Sunday, clearing the way for President Robert Mugabe to continue his 28-year rule.

Tsvangirai declared that the election was no longer credible and the loss of life among his supporters was simply too high.

"We can't ask the people to cast their vote on June 27 when that vote will cost their lives. We will no longer participate in this violent sham of an election," Tsvangirai said at a news conference in Zimbabwe's capital.

As Africa's longest serving leader, Mugabe has faced little serious political opposition, but results from the March 29 first round vote showed he finished second behind Tsvangirai and his Movement for Democratic Change.

Since then he has remained defiant in the face of harsh criticism, vowing recently that "only God" can remove him from office and vowing the opposition will never come to power in his lifetime.

"It shall never happen... as long as we are alive and those who fought for the country are alive," he said. "We are prepared to fight for our country and to go to war for it."
There has been mounting condemnation from even loyal African allies that the former guerrilla leader is holding on to power and has bankrupted the country's once thriving economy.

The capitial was tense following Tsvangirai's announcement. As night fell, militia groups roamed the streets, and hotels sent their workers home early out of fear for the safety. Normally busy Sunday traders packed up early.

Tsvangirai called on the United Nations, the European Union and the Southern African regional bloc to intervene.

He said he would put forward new proposals by Wednesday on how take the country forward. The opposition has repeatedly said it would welcome a government of "national healing" including ruling ZANU-PF party members but not Mugabe himself.

Zimbabwean Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu said Friday's runoff would go ahead in accordance with the constitution — and to prove Zimbabweans' support for Mugabe, who has held power since independence from Britain in 1980.

"The constitution does not say that if somebody drops out or decides to chicken out the runoff will not be held," Ndlovu said.

"It is an election of the people of Zimbabwe against Britain and America," he said, returning to the government's theme of portraying Tsvangirai as a puppet of Western powers out to re-colonize Zimbabwe. The opposition, Britain and the United States reject such claims.

Tsvangirai won the first round of the presidential election on March 29, but did not gain an outright majority against 84-year-old Mugabe. That campaign was generally peaceful, but the runoff has been overshadowed by violence and intimidation, especially in rural areas. Independent human rights groups say 85 people have died and tens of thousands have been displaced from their homes, most of them opposition supporters.

Ndlovu reiterated government claims that the opposition was to blame for the violence.

Tsvangirai complained that he was being treated like a "common criminal," with his attempts to tour the country stymied by police at roadblocks.

The state-controlled media have banned opposition advertisements, claiming they "contain inappropriate language and information." The media cited one ad that claimed that Tsvangirai won the election, "which is not the case, hence the runoff."

Tendai Biti, the opposition party's No. 2, was arrested within minutes of his return from South Africa last week and is being held on treason charges.

Tsvangirai had hoped to address his main campaign rally for the runoff Sunday afternoon.

But thousands of ruling party militants blockaded the show ground site and set up road blocs at the main approach streets, ripped branches from trees and hurled stones at cars. Hundreds of militants, many with sticks and wearing ZANU-PF ruling party colors, marched past its headquarters chanting slogans. ZANU-PF trucks, warning lights flashing and crammed with passengers, circled the grounds.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change claimed that the militants were beating opposition supporters who were trying to reach the venue and said at least two were seriously injured. It said the militants attacked journalists and forced African election monitors, who had been driving around the rally site, to flee. Election monitors could not immediately be reached for comment.

Zimbabwe has barred Western observers and most journalists, but permitted African election monitors.

Mugabe has shrugged off mounting international condemnation. But never before has he faced such criticism from other African leaders who now openly say Mugabe is an embarrassment.

Even one of Mugabe's staunchest allies, Angolan President Eduardo dos Santos, urged him to end "all acts of intimidation and violence," while current African Union chair Tanzania said it doubted the elections would be free and fair. The leaders of Rwanda and Kenya — which have both suffered deadly political violence — have been especially scathing.

Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa said Sunday that the runoff must be postponed. Mwanawasa, who currently holds the rotating chair of the Southern African Development Community and has long been among Mugabe's most outspoken critics in the region, said Zimbabwe had failed to meet minimum election standards.

He voiced particular frustration that he had been unable to reach South African President Thabo Mbeki, the region's designated mediator in the Zimbabwe crisis, and criticized Mbeki for not sharing information.

Mbeki is increasingly isolated both abroad at at home for his appeasement of Mugabe and his refusal to flex South Africa's economic muscle against his neighbor.

Mbeki's spokesman Mukoni Ratshitanga said Tsvangirai had called Mbeki earlier Sunday to inform him he was withdrawing.

"Of course we would like to encourage the MDC to continue to play a role in the normalization of the political process in Zimbabwe. And we are encouraged that Mr. Tsvangirai says he is not closing the door completely on negotiations," said Ratshitanga.

The European Union on Friday threatened to step up sanctions against Mugabe's government, and the United States and Britain want a special U.N. Security Council meeting.

At a rally in the western city of Bulawayo on Friday, Mugabe said the opposition was lying about the violence and that everywhere he visited was peaceful. His powerful police chief pinned the blame firmly on the opposition and said that police would clamp down.

Mugabe was lauded early in his rule for campaigning for racial reconciliation. But in recent years, he has been accused of ruining the economy and holding onto power through fraud and intimidation.

People are going hungry in what was once the region's breadbasket, with the world's highest inflation rate putting staples out of reach.

The economic slide has been blamed on the collapse of the key agriculture sector after often-violent seizures of farmland from whites. Mugabe claimed he ordered the seizures, begun in 2002, to benefit poor blacks. But many of the farms instead went to his loyalists.



Offline crazyhorse

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Re: Mugabe 'The Dictator' Stays for Now
« Reply #1 on: June 23, 2008, 04:05:51 AM »
......And stay he will for as long as it suites the powers that be. It was Britain who wanted the dirty kaffir in power, now it's up to them to kick his black ass into the nearest hole, if they are so concerned about his atrocities. They were quick to ridicule and condemn us white South Africans for giving the blacks of South Africa stability and the best living conditions of any black on the Continent of Africa, but they praise these black terrorist scum like mandela and his filthy terrorist regime, mugabe and his zanu PF scum terrorists, and in fact, any scum bag that suites them.  The truth of the matter is that it's white Europeans who are keeping and allowing that nob head mugabe to stay in power, they just make it look like they are concerned to fool the people......err, sorry, the sheeple!

Offline Cato

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Re: Mugabe 'The Dictator' Stays for Now
« Reply #2 on: June 26, 2008, 11:58:25 AM »
Personally, I think the longer the better. A lot of brave whites died defending the country from Mugabe and his ilk. Let him complete the transformation of his country to a dust bowl..that's what they all voted for. Recently a column in the UK Daily Mail was entitled "Smith was Right". Let everybody learn. And Tsvangerai? So what? Hiding in the Netherlands consulate after a load of people had already died for him..cummon!!

Offline crazyhorse

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Re: Mugabe 'The Dictator' Stays for Now
« Reply #3 on: June 26, 2008, 03:59:38 PM »
Personally, I think the longer the better. A lot of brave whites died defending the country from Mugabe and his ilk. Let him complete the transformation of his country to a dust bowl..that's what they all voted for. Recently a column in the UK Daily Mail was entitled "Smith was Right". Let everybody learn. And Tsvangerai? So what? Hiding in the Netherlands consulate after a load of people had already died for him..cummon!!

A good point!  There is no way white Rhodesians will ever rule in that country again and it has to go to the dogs and the gutter of no return, just like South Africa is going. As for Morgan Tsvangerai......I think he is using a ploy.....he is standing down because he says too many of his supporters are being killed, and of course he is right. But! Does he really care? He just wants to be in power like all black zots with a pinch of Savy. This stance might just get the Brit administration to jump in and help him further his agenda, and to save him from mugabe's idiot Terr's. I don't believe he is just giving up his chance to be another black dictator with another black agenda set out for him by his controllers in Europe. The handfull of whites left there had better start packing pronto, because when bobby baboon starts his genocide against the Matebele they are going to be on the menu as starters.