Showing posts with label Zimbabwe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zimbabwe. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Mugabe 'fighting for life' in Singapore hospital [-Dictators will all die ... no matter how they hang on to power!]

Tue Apr 10 2012
Agencies

Harare - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe is reportedly fighting for his life in a Singapore hospital with an undisclosed illness.

According to a Zimbabwe Mail report, a senior official of Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party, said the President was undergoing intensive treatment in Singapore and that some members of his family had joined him after boarding a chartered private jet on Saturday.

The report comes amid revelations that Mugabe had agreed to hand over power to his Defence Minister, Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Mugabe: "How can a pen fight a gun?" / Hun Sen: How can the People Power fight a threat of war?

General Hun Sen reviewing his troops
The guerrillas who helped to bring Robert Mugabe to power emerged from the bush in 1980. The President is now using the rhetoric of revolutionary violence to threaten political opponents

Robert Mugabe warns Zimbabwe's voters: 'How can a pen fight a gun?'

June 17, 2008
Jan Raath in Harare and Catherine Philp, Diplomatic Editor
The Times (UK)

Robert Mugabe gave warning yesterday that he would not cede power if he loses next week’s election to the Opposition in his most explicit statement yet of his refusal to respect the result.

State-controlled media reported his comments to supporters at an election rally, the latest in a series of increasingly menacing threats as Zimbabwe counts down to the June 27 presidential run-off poll. Mr Mugabe’s military-backed regime has been carrying out a campaign of violence aimed at wiping out the opposition vote.

“We fought for this country, and a lot of blood was shed,” Mr Mugabe told his supporters. “We are not going to give up our country because of a mere X. How can a ballpoint fight with a gun?

The warning came a day after he declared: “We are ready to go to war.” Evidence, say observers, of mounting concerns that he may not have done enough to secure the vote.

Mr Mugabe’s threat coincided with a sudden worsening in violence in the townships around Harare, as mobs of hundreds of Zanu (PF) youths marched through the streets at night, chanting war songs, dragging people out of their homes and beating them up with sticks, iron rods and axes. Until then the terror campaign had been confined largely to rural areas where security forces and militia groups have conspired to create “no-go zones”, banning aid organisations and all outsiders to prevent them witnessing the intimidation.

The level of violence has increased dramatically in the past two weeks, moving from beatings and torture to mutilation and killing, with several victims burnt alive and others shot.

The run-off vote was triggered after Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change candidate, beat Mr Mugabe in March’s presidential elections but, according to the widely discredited official results, fell short of the 50 per cent needed for outright victory.

In a surreal twist Mr Mugabe moved yesterday to arrest opposition leaders for provoking the violence being carried out by his own forces. Only a handful of incidents have involved opposition supporters attacking those from Zanu (PF).

“We are warning them that we will not hesitate to arrest them and we will do that in broad daylight,” Mr Mugabe told supporters at a campaign rally in Kadoma, south of Harare.

The regime has already targeted opposition leaders for arrest, detaining Mr Tsvangirai to prevent him from campaigning and locking up his deputy, Tendai Biti, on the capital charge of treason. Mr Biti was due to appear in court on the treason charge yesterday but instead police brought new charges against him for “causing disaffection in the security forces,” and for insulting Mr Mugabe by stating that “he is an evil man who should be arrested and handed over to The Hague”.

Mr Biti’s arrest prompted some frustrated African countries, including Botswana, to break ranks with South Africa and call for the regime to back off or risk tainting the upcoming vote.

Gordon Brown gave warning that international election monitors must be allowed to monitor the poll or risk having Mr Mugabe’s “criminal regime” steal the people’s vote.

“In recent weeks under Robert Mugabe’s increasingly desperate and criminal regime Zimbabwe has seen 53 killings, 2,000 beatings, the displacement of 30,000 people and the arrests of opposition leaders,” Mr Brown told reporters after a meeting with President Bush.

“This is wholly unacceptable. Mugabe must not be allowed to steal the election, which is now less than two weeks away.

“We call for Zimbabwe to accept a United Nations human rights envoy to visit Zimbabwe now and to accept international monitors from all parts of the world who are available to ensure that this is a free and fair election,” Mr Brown said. Mr Bush pledged his support, telling Mr Brown: “You obviously are emotional on the subject and I don’t blame you, because the people of Zimbabwe have suffered under Mugabe’s leadership. We will work with you to ensure these good folks have free and fair elections to the best extent possible, which obviously Mr Mugabe does not want to have.”

Zimbabwe has barred monitors from Western countries, allowing in only those from the African Union and the Southern African Development Community. Neither of those organisations has ever given Zimbabwe a negative verdict on its elections, despite widespread fraud since 2002.

A senior UN envoy, Haile Menkerios, arrived in Zimbabwe yesterday for a five-day visit to assess the political and humanitarian crisis, a concession forced on Mr Mugabe by the UN. Some have speculated that the Government might call off the election at the last minute if it is not confident of winning but that victory by any means remains their goal.

“Mugabe is worried,” said Eldred Masunungure, a political commentator. “He has never been this aggressive before. The threat is real and credible. My assessment is that it is 50-50. Mugabe is not confident of victory but Tsvangirai is also worried that support is shifting and he may not be able to cross the threshold. It is unpredictable.”

President's fighting talk

— “Our votes must go together with our guns. After all, any votes we shall have, shall have been the product of the gun. The gun which produces the vote should remain its security officer - its guarantor” (1976)

— “Our party must continue to strike fear in the heart of the white man, our real enemy!” (December 2000)

— “We are no longer going to ask for the land but we are going to take it without negotiating” (2000)

— “We have degrees in violence” (2000)

— “When they criticise the Government ... we take the position that they can go hang” (2007)

— “Let the people's voice thunder across the whole country on 29 March, rejecting and damning once and for all the bootlicking British stooges, the traitors and sellouts, the political witches and political prostitutes, political charlatans and the two-headed political creatures” (2008)

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

One continent apart ... but same election manipulation tactics for Mugabe and Hun Sen

Robert Mugabe (L) and Hun Sen (R)

Mugabe under fire over Zimbabwe poll results

HARARE (AFP) — Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe came under increased pressure Monday to allow the release of presidential election results as his rival Morgan Tsvangirai met with ruling party chief Jacob Zuma in South Africa.

The heat on 84-year-old Mugabe was turned up with a flurry of near-simultaneous statements from the European Union, the White House, the US State Department and the United Nations.

The man who says he defeated Mugabe outright, opposition leader Tsvangirai, meanwhile, made his first overseas trip since the March 29 polls.

Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) was cagey about the visit, describing it as routine and denying any meetings with government officials took place.

However, a spokesman from the African National Congress confirmed to AFP that Tsvangirai held talks with Zuma, who was elected head of the ANC in December and is likely to be the next South African president.

A judge in Harare dismissed a claim by the electoral commission that the courts could not hear an MDC legal bid to force the immediate declaration of the results and said he would rule Tuesday on the matter.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged the commission, whose leaders are appointed by Mugabe, to release results of the polls "expeditiously and with transparency," while the European Union called for them "without further delay."

The US further questioned the logic behind Mugabe's ruling party's call for a recount of the presidential vote.

"It's overdue that the election results be announced," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters in Washington.

"It's interesting that they haven't had the official election results announced, yet there is a call for a recount. I'm not sure of the logic train there," McCormack said.

Tsvangirai, 56, claims outright victory in last week's poll, but the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) says there was no clear winner and has endorsed Mugabe for a second-round vote.

ZANU-PF is alleging irregularities and said on Monday it had arrested several election officials.

"Since the counting started we have arrested seven people in connection with anomalies which became apparent in the presidential polls," police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena told AFP.

The MDC wrested control of parliament from Mugabe's party for the first time in the simultaneous legislative elections, but the ZANU-PF is contesting enough seats to potentially overturn that result.

War veterans, hardline Mugabe supporters who led often violent farm invasions at the start of the decade, have tried to move onto several of the few remaining white-owned farms.

The Commercial Farmers Union, which represents white farmers in Zimbabwe, said Mugabe supporters had "invaded" at least 30 white-owned properties and accused the president of orchestrating their campaign.

"People are being paid to basically carry out the wishes of the highest office. This is purely racial. We should be living in a country of harmony but the state media is pushing racial hatred which is not good for the country."

The farm invasions serve as a reminder of the violence which followed Mugabe's last electoral reverse when he lost a referendum on presidential powers in 2000.

Then, the occupation of some 4,000 farms came after he was defeated in a constitutional referendum aimed at broadening his powers and facilitating land seizures.

Since being dealt a serious electoral defeat 10 days ago, Mugabe has sought to win popularity by discrediting Tsvangirai and his opposition as Western puppets who would reverse his land reforms.

"Land must remain in our hands. The land is ours, it must not be allowed to slip back into the hands of whites," Mugabe, who has ruled since independence from Britain in 1980, was quoted as saying by the state media on Monday.

Critics blame Mugabe's land reform programme, which was intensified after he lost the referendum in 2000, for Zimbabwe's economic meltdown.

Faced with 80 percent unemployment and six-digit inflation, almost one third of Zimbabwe's 13 million population have left the country, both to find work and food as even basics such as bread and cooking oil are now hard to come by.

Meanwhile, a Harare court released on bail New York Times correspondent Barry Bearak, a British national and two South African media workers after charging them with covering last week's polls without accreditation.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Political Cartoon: Hun Xen, you're next!

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

Mugabe's 28-year dictatorship is on the way out: A lesson for would-be SE Asian dictators

Robert Mugabe (L) rules Zimbabwe for the past 28-year; Hun Sen (R) rules Cambodia since 1985

Zimbabwe's Ruling Party Loses its Majority in Parliament

By Peta Thornycroft, VOA
Harare
02 April 2008


Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party has lost its majority in parliament according to the latest official result from the Zimbabwe Election Commission. And, as Peta Thornycroft reports for VOA from Harare, this news follows an earlier announcement from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change that it believes its candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, has won more than 50 percent of the vote in the presidential race.

The Zimbabwe Election Commission's latest results indicate that the MDC and its allies will have an historic, small, parliamentary majority. ZANU-PF has held the majority in parliament since independence from Britain in 1980.

But this news was pre-empted by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, which in a media conference announced that its tally, which it says coincides with that of the independent Zimbabwe Election Support Network, shows that its presidential candidate Tsvangirai got 50.3 percent of the vote. So far there is no official tally of votes cast in the race for president.

If the MDC tally of the presidential race is correct, this would mean that Tsvangirai has won an outright victory over the 84-year-old incumbent, President Robert Mugabe.

MDC Secretary General Tendai Biti says this means there should be no need for a run-off in the presidential race which would have to take place in 21 days from when the result is officially announced. But he said Tsvangirai would be willing to contest a run-off, if the Commission insists one is required.

"A runoff in 21 days," said Biti. "That is what the law says. If that is the case, without prejudice to our position this party will contest the runoff, but we would have hoped for a situation that there will be a conceding of the result for a number of reasons, and the number of reasons being that it is unlikely that the people's will, will in any way be reversed in that run-off. If anything, there will actually be an embarrassing margin in favor of the opposition in the runoff. There is no question about that.

Biti said he hopes President Mugabe will realize that any run-off would deliver him a smashing defeat.

He adds that the party's assessment of the election results are based on actual votes cast, counted and verified by the Zimbabwe Election Commission at each individual polling station. But he notes that there are some outstanding results which have not yet been released.

Political analysts say the margins are so narrow that the MDC might be forced to accept a run-off because disputes about even one or two voting stations could significantly change the overall percentages.

Biti said the margin of error was very small, adding that his party has already called for verification of the officially announced results at some polling stations because of discrepancies with its own records.

Meanwhile the ruling ZANU-PF has described the MDC's tally of the presidential race as "wishful". Party spokesman Bright Matonga said no party could decide the winner but suggested ZANU-PF has accepted there might be a run-off for the presidential election.

The elections last Saturday were for four contests, the presidency, parliament, senate and local government.