News / National
'Zanu-PF already rigging'
27 Oct 2016 at 14:08hrs | Views
After a humiliating defeat at the hands of independent candidate Temba Mliswa, Zanu-PF is now allegedly sharpening its rigging tools and has ring fenced rural areas ahead of the 2018 elections, the main opposition MDC has said.
Former Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC, which is credited with helping Mliswa win the Norton by-election yesterday said rural areas will soon be sealed off by Zanu-PF where people will be intimidated to vote for the faction-riddled party.
In a statement yesterday, MDC-T spokesperson Obert Gutu said Zanu-PF plans to raid certain rural areas and use partisan distribution of food to curry favour with potential voters.
"We are also aware of the fact that the crumbling regime has decided to ring fence all rural areas as they strategise to rig the forthcoming harmonised elections. Villagers are being forced to attend Zanu-PF meetings throughout the rural areas and traditional leaders have been ordered to draw up lists of all known and suspected opposition political party supporters," Gutu claimed.
Zanu-PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo's mobile phone was not available yesterday, while the party's political commissar Saviour Kasukuwere did not respond to questions sent to his mobile phone.
However, United Kingdom-based law professor Alex Magaisa, who is also a former top aide of Tsvangirai, opined that Zimbabwe could be hurtling towards the dark days of 2008, when violence and intimidation became the order of the day.
He pointed out to the violent skirmishes that flared up in Norton as Zanu-PF supporters descended on Mliswa's backers and the silence from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) as ominous signs of worse things to come.
The respected academic said that although voters managed to overcome intimidation and also chose to ignore gifts in form of residential stands from Zanu-PF to vote for an independent candidate, the threat is still hanging above voters' heads.
"It is probably an indication of a maturing voter, who refuses to be bought by cheap and insincere gifts. If voters are taking the gifts and still voting according to their wishes, this would be the start of an important revolution in voter behaviour," said Magaisa.
Still Magaisa warned that Zanu-PF could respond to the rebuff in Norton with its "stone age tactics of violence".
"It remains to be seen how Zanu-PF will respond to the defeat. It might choose retribution, using violence to punish voters or simply withdraw the residential stands, feeling jilted by the voters".
The Norton by-election was characterised by brazen electoral malpractices such as intimidation, violence, vote buying and yet Zec chose to bury its head in the sand, the analysts said.
According to Magaisa, opposition parties should not mistake the critical 2018 election for Norton as the political arena is still tilted in favour of Zanu-PF.
"What remains true is that the electoral landscape is still skewed in favour of Zanu-PF and Zec continues to underperform in its role as a neutral, impartial and effective supervisor of elections. Mliswa's success should not deceive the opposition or anyone into thinking that all is well in respect of election machinery in Zimbabwe," said Magaisa.
Pointing out to the year 2008 when a bruised Zanu-PF unleashed a reign of terror on ordinary Zimbabweans who had dared to vote Tsvangirai for president in that year's March elections, analysts say Zimbabwe will tailspin to the dark days when some areas where sealed off by the ruling party with the aid of the country's security apparatus.
In Norton, Zanu-PF rolled out residential stands, food hampers and other freebies to entice voters but the electorate - that is reeling from economic hardships spawned by Mugabe's 36 years rule - was unmoved.
Immediately after the announcement of the Norton results, Kasukuwere went on twitter and cryptically said "a lesson has been learnt".
"Norton has eluded us. Key lessons have been learnt. Thank you to our supporters for coming out and voting for our candidate," said Kasukuwere.
In its statement the MDC, which was backing Mliswa, was also cautious saying in as much as the Norton by-election was a "triumph" against Zanu-PF, it does not necessarily mean that the electoral playing field is now even.
"Whilst we are very pleased that Mliswa won the parliamentary by-election that was recently held in Norton, the MDC remains acutely aware of the fact that the electoral playing field is far from even. Although Mliswa emerged the winner by more than 2 600 votes, the by-election itself was neither free nor fair," said Gutu in a statement.
The MDC has vowed to boycott all elections in the country until the full implementation of requisite electoral reforms that are consistent with the country's relatively progressive Constitution.
Through the National Electoral Reform Agenda (Nera), the MDC and other political parties have been pushing government to implement reforms before 2018 elections and Gutu yesterday said "the game has just began.
"As seasoned and experienced campaigners for peaceful, democratic change, the MDC will never, ever sit on its laurels and believe that the electoral playing field is now even simply because Temba Mliswa won the Norton by-bylection. Far from it, if anything, we have decided to up the ante and ensure that our fight for the adoption of electoral reforms goes a gear up.
"We are dealing with a morbidly recalcitrant and stubborn dictatorship in the form of the Robert Mugabe-led Zanu-PF regime. This is a dictatorship that will stop at nothing to make sure that it remains in power so that they can continue to loot and cannibalise the little that is now left of our national economy," said Gutu.
Former Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC, which is credited with helping Mliswa win the Norton by-election yesterday said rural areas will soon be sealed off by Zanu-PF where people will be intimidated to vote for the faction-riddled party.
In a statement yesterday, MDC-T spokesperson Obert Gutu said Zanu-PF plans to raid certain rural areas and use partisan distribution of food to curry favour with potential voters.
"We are also aware of the fact that the crumbling regime has decided to ring fence all rural areas as they strategise to rig the forthcoming harmonised elections. Villagers are being forced to attend Zanu-PF meetings throughout the rural areas and traditional leaders have been ordered to draw up lists of all known and suspected opposition political party supporters," Gutu claimed.
Zanu-PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo's mobile phone was not available yesterday, while the party's political commissar Saviour Kasukuwere did not respond to questions sent to his mobile phone.
However, United Kingdom-based law professor Alex Magaisa, who is also a former top aide of Tsvangirai, opined that Zimbabwe could be hurtling towards the dark days of 2008, when violence and intimidation became the order of the day.
He pointed out to the violent skirmishes that flared up in Norton as Zanu-PF supporters descended on Mliswa's backers and the silence from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) as ominous signs of worse things to come.
The respected academic said that although voters managed to overcome intimidation and also chose to ignore gifts in form of residential stands from Zanu-PF to vote for an independent candidate, the threat is still hanging above voters' heads.
"It is probably an indication of a maturing voter, who refuses to be bought by cheap and insincere gifts. If voters are taking the gifts and still voting according to their wishes, this would be the start of an important revolution in voter behaviour," said Magaisa.
Still Magaisa warned that Zanu-PF could respond to the rebuff in Norton with its "stone age tactics of violence".
"It remains to be seen how Zanu-PF will respond to the defeat. It might choose retribution, using violence to punish voters or simply withdraw the residential stands, feeling jilted by the voters".
The Norton by-election was characterised by brazen electoral malpractices such as intimidation, violence, vote buying and yet Zec chose to bury its head in the sand, the analysts said.
According to Magaisa, opposition parties should not mistake the critical 2018 election for Norton as the political arena is still tilted in favour of Zanu-PF.
"What remains true is that the electoral landscape is still skewed in favour of Zanu-PF and Zec continues to underperform in its role as a neutral, impartial and effective supervisor of elections. Mliswa's success should not deceive the opposition or anyone into thinking that all is well in respect of election machinery in Zimbabwe," said Magaisa.
Pointing out to the year 2008 when a bruised Zanu-PF unleashed a reign of terror on ordinary Zimbabweans who had dared to vote Tsvangirai for president in that year's March elections, analysts say Zimbabwe will tailspin to the dark days when some areas where sealed off by the ruling party with the aid of the country's security apparatus.
In Norton, Zanu-PF rolled out residential stands, food hampers and other freebies to entice voters but the electorate - that is reeling from economic hardships spawned by Mugabe's 36 years rule - was unmoved.
Immediately after the announcement of the Norton results, Kasukuwere went on twitter and cryptically said "a lesson has been learnt".
"Norton has eluded us. Key lessons have been learnt. Thank you to our supporters for coming out and voting for our candidate," said Kasukuwere.
In its statement the MDC, which was backing Mliswa, was also cautious saying in as much as the Norton by-election was a "triumph" against Zanu-PF, it does not necessarily mean that the electoral playing field is now even.
"Whilst we are very pleased that Mliswa won the parliamentary by-election that was recently held in Norton, the MDC remains acutely aware of the fact that the electoral playing field is far from even. Although Mliswa emerged the winner by more than 2 600 votes, the by-election itself was neither free nor fair," said Gutu in a statement.
The MDC has vowed to boycott all elections in the country until the full implementation of requisite electoral reforms that are consistent with the country's relatively progressive Constitution.
Through the National Electoral Reform Agenda (Nera), the MDC and other political parties have been pushing government to implement reforms before 2018 elections and Gutu yesterday said "the game has just began.
"As seasoned and experienced campaigners for peaceful, democratic change, the MDC will never, ever sit on its laurels and believe that the electoral playing field is now even simply because Temba Mliswa won the Norton by-bylection. Far from it, if anything, we have decided to up the ante and ensure that our fight for the adoption of electoral reforms goes a gear up.
"We are dealing with a morbidly recalcitrant and stubborn dictatorship in the form of the Robert Mugabe-led Zanu-PF regime. This is a dictatorship that will stop at nothing to make sure that it remains in power so that they can continue to loot and cannibalise the little that is now left of our national economy," said Gutu.
Source - dailynews