News / National
Zanu-PF clean sweep anticipated in June 10 by-election
09 Jun 2015 at 16:44hrs | Views
By-elections to be held in Zimbabwe on Wednesday were almost single-handedly precipitated by Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), even though the opposition party stands to lose from Zanu-PF's anticipated clean sweep of many seats.
More than 400 000 Zimbabweans are eligible to vote in these polls taking place in 16 constituencies. They were necessitated after Tsvangirai's party expelled 21 MPs who'd joined (yet another) breakaway faction of the MDC, this time led by the party's former secretary general, ex-finance minister Tendai Biti.
The seats were duly declared vacant. But then the MDC said it would boycott the polls because electoral reforms had not been carried out. The polls are "shambolic and flawed" and the MDC will "never, ever" legitimise them by taking part, spokesman Obert Gutu said last week. Their position is weakened, analysts say, by the party's insistence on participating in the 2013 presidential elections despite a similar glaring lack of reforms.
Tsvangirai lost those elections, and in the process, lost the hearts of many of those who'd supported him and his party so hopefully after the MDC was formed in 1999.
Some seats are being filled under a system of proportional representation. Smaller opposition parties will field candidates in contested seats mostly in Harare, Bulawayo and the eastern city of Mutare, where locals speak of a rust-red Hummer belonging to local businessman and Zanu-PF candidate, Esau Mupfumi, doing the rounds, plastered with campaign pictures.
Other parliamentary hopefuls include a hastily-formed coalition of independent candidates. The ruling party suspects some of the independents are linked to Tsvangirai's party or to sacked vice president Joice Mujuru. Mujuru has not confirmed her backing for anyone, despite an oblique hint in a statement last week that she was ready to "serve the nation".
Mujuru also stressed then that she was enjoying having time to cook for her grandchildren. After her humiliating ouster just after a Zanu-PF congress in December and the loss of her husband in a suspicious fire four years ago, few will blame her.
Tsvangirai 'voluntarily' caused the vote
Zanu-PF took 160 seats in the 210-seat parliament in the 2013 polls, and now it stands to gain more. The party of President Robert Mugabe is already triumphant.
Tsvangirai has "voluntarily" caused the vote, tweeted information minister Jonathan Moyo, himself standing as a candidate in Tsholotsho, western Zimbabwe. The dusty rural constituency has benefited from unprecedented attention in the last few weeks; a classroom block has been commissioned, boreholes are being sunk and the local football stadium upgraded.
The ruling party denies allegations of vote-buying. Moyo said on Twitter this week, "Elections do benefit the electorate and that's why democracy is good." But the minister accused two independent candidates of trying to buy votes with elephant meat and mealie-meal donations, the Southern Eye newspaper reported Tuesday.
Analyst Pedzisayi Ruhanya told News24: "These elections mean nothing. The behaviour of the regime is not changing. They are elections without a choice."
And where's Mugabe in all this? In Egypt, as it happens.
More than 400 000 Zimbabweans are eligible to vote in these polls taking place in 16 constituencies. They were necessitated after Tsvangirai's party expelled 21 MPs who'd joined (yet another) breakaway faction of the MDC, this time led by the party's former secretary general, ex-finance minister Tendai Biti.
The seats were duly declared vacant. But then the MDC said it would boycott the polls because electoral reforms had not been carried out. The polls are "shambolic and flawed" and the MDC will "never, ever" legitimise them by taking part, spokesman Obert Gutu said last week. Their position is weakened, analysts say, by the party's insistence on participating in the 2013 presidential elections despite a similar glaring lack of reforms.
Tsvangirai lost those elections, and in the process, lost the hearts of many of those who'd supported him and his party so hopefully after the MDC was formed in 1999.
Some seats are being filled under a system of proportional representation. Smaller opposition parties will field candidates in contested seats mostly in Harare, Bulawayo and the eastern city of Mutare, where locals speak of a rust-red Hummer belonging to local businessman and Zanu-PF candidate, Esau Mupfumi, doing the rounds, plastered with campaign pictures.
Other parliamentary hopefuls include a hastily-formed coalition of independent candidates. The ruling party suspects some of the independents are linked to Tsvangirai's party or to sacked vice president Joice Mujuru. Mujuru has not confirmed her backing for anyone, despite an oblique hint in a statement last week that she was ready to "serve the nation".
Tsvangirai 'voluntarily' caused the vote
Zanu-PF took 160 seats in the 210-seat parliament in the 2013 polls, and now it stands to gain more. The party of President Robert Mugabe is already triumphant.
Tsvangirai has "voluntarily" caused the vote, tweeted information minister Jonathan Moyo, himself standing as a candidate in Tsholotsho, western Zimbabwe. The dusty rural constituency has benefited from unprecedented attention in the last few weeks; a classroom block has been commissioned, boreholes are being sunk and the local football stadium upgraded.
The ruling party denies allegations of vote-buying. Moyo said on Twitter this week, "Elections do benefit the electorate and that's why democracy is good." But the minister accused two independent candidates of trying to buy votes with elephant meat and mealie-meal donations, the Southern Eye newspaper reported Tuesday.
Analyst Pedzisayi Ruhanya told News24: "These elections mean nothing. The behaviour of the regime is not changing. They are elections without a choice."
And where's Mugabe in all this? In Egypt, as it happens.
Source - news24