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Mugabe
could stay on until 2010
Godwin
Gandu, Mail & Guardian (SA)
December
08, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=292737&area=/insight/insight__africa/
There are growing
signs that factions within Zanu-PF will push for an extension of
President Robert Mugabe’s mandate by pushing through contentious
constitutional amendments which would allow him to stay on until
2010.
This means presidential
elections in 2008 will be deferred as Zanu-PF seeks to take advantage
of its majority in Parliament and the Senate to push through the
constitutional amendments.
The hint that
Mugabe will stay in power for the next three years came last Saturday
from a columnist known as Nathaniel Manheru, of the state-controlled
Herald newspaper. Former information minister Jonathan Moyo confirmed
that Manheru’s real identity is George Charamba, Mugabe’s spokesperson
and secretary for information.
"When Zimbabweans
go to the polls in 2010, polls to choose their president and members
of Parliament, our repining private media, the British and the Americans
will have died from confounded predictions. That is my prediction,"
the column said.
The growing
push to back three more years of Mugabe appears to be fuelled by
internal Zanu-PF power struggles, and seems to have poured cold
water on Vice-President Joyce Mujuru’s ambitions to take over as
interim president in 2008.
Already political
temperatures are boiling within Zanu-PF ahead of the party’s crucial
annual conference slated for next Thursday.
"Those
that support Mujuru were anticipating prospects for recovery with
a new leadership face," says Zanu-PF insiders, but others,
"feel Mujuru was on an ugly mission to weed out those aligned
to [Rural Housing Minister Emmerson] Mnangagwa," hence "they
feel better off with Mugabe."
So far, three
provinces have submitted recommendations that Mugabe amend the Constitution
to hold presidential elections at the same time as parliamentary
elections in 2010.
Presidential
elections are currently set for 2008. Midlands, Mavingo and Harare
passed the resolutions this week.
When Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa tabled the proposed constitutional amendments
last July, various options existed for Zanu-PF. These included reducing
the current parliamentary term from 2010 to 2008 and holding presidential
and parliamentary elections simultaneously, or having both elections
in 2010 with the Parliament and Senate electing an interim president
to run the country between 2008 and 2010.
Should Mugabe
extend his term, Mujuru will have to wait until the 2010 elections.
Insiders within
Zanu-PF feel the development is a boost for a faction aligned to
Mnangagwa who controversially lost the vice-presidency to Mujuru
two years back.
Mnangagwa’s
faction believes that if Mujuru takes over, "there was [a]
likelihood of a damaging political witch-hunt against her rivals"
that would split the 43-year-old party.
Daggers are
now drawn, as other factions within Zanu-PF are confused about whether
to endorse the new resolutions.
"She
has rubbed many people the wrong way already," said an insider
within the party’s Manicaland province who feels she shouldn’t rule.
"We would rather settle with Mugabe until the situation stabilises
in 2010," he said.
While the decision
could serve the interests of certain Zanu-PF factions, it "certainly
would harm prospects for economic recovery," says Lovemore
Matombo, the president of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions.
"Another
extension of Mugabe’s term will be disastrous for the country,"
says John Makumbe, a political scientist with the University of
Zimbabwe.
"You need
to build national consensus on how to resolve the national crisis.
It does not matter if Zanu-PF goes ahead and propose these amendments
as this will not solve anything. We need a new democratic Constitution,
not piecemeal amendments which are done without involving all stakeholders,"
says Professor Welshman Ncube, founding secretary general of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
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