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Robert
Mugabe is made 'leader for life' at rubber-stamp party gathering
Jan Raath, The Times (UK)
December 14, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3048497.ece
Robert Mugabe was effectively
crowned President for life yesterday after Zimbabwe's ruling
Zanu PF party "affirmed" that he was its sole candidate
in elections due next year. A carefully orchestrated special congress
passed without a vote or a single word of debate, all but assuring
Mr Mugabe, 83, another five-year term as President. Senior party
officials lavished praise on the leader as thousands of supporters
wearing shirts bearing his image brandished banners denouncing Gordon
Brown, whom Mr Mugabe regularly accuses of trying to foment opposition.
Possible challengers from the two main factions within the ruling
party were sidelined by the stage-managed congress. Mr Mugabe, who
has been Zimbabwe's supreme leader since independence in 1980,
has spent much of the past year manoeuvring to block the ambitions
of Joyce Mujuru, one of two vice-presidents, and her husband Solomon,
a former general who is regarded as a major party power broker.
The "extraordinary"
congress was called to rubber-stamp Mr Mugabe's candidacy.
After he made a wandering two-hour speech to the 10,000 delegates,
mostly the rural poor, at an indoor stadium in Harare, the congress
moved on to the item of his "affirmation" as presidential
candidate. Each chairman of the party's ten provincial councils
rose in turn to read out reports of their meetings in the past few
months, each stating that they had endorsed Mr Mugabe. "That
was it," said a ruling party official who asked not to be named.
"He wasn't going to risk taking a vote. Of course no
one objected. It would be suicide to challenge him openly."
Analysts say that the earlier provincial meetings were also orchestrated.
In 2005, when Mr Mugabe nominated Mrs Mujuru as vice-president,
six of the ten provinces voted against her. In a rage, he sacked
the chairmen in the six provinces, replaced them and ordered the
vote to be retaken. The required result was then returned.
His most blatant manipulation
was when his late wife, Sally, stood for the chair of the party's
women's league in 1990. Although the results showed her well
behind in second place, he declared her the winner. Observers say
that yesterday's affair shows Mr Mugabe's extreme anxiety
over his authority as the country hurtles deeper into economic chaos.
Queues for cash outside banks were longer than ever yesterday, each
person hoping for a maximum of Z$5 million - scarcely enough
for a return trip between township and industrial area. In the city
centre, people chopped at hedges for firewood as power cuts lengthened.
Mr Mugabe, in a shirt featuring large pictures of himself, mentioned
none of this in his speech. "I am 75kg, but I am carrying the
weight of 14 million people, babies, ladies fat and thin,"
he said. "I dare not abandon them. Every one of them matters
to me. Their welfare is my welfare."
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