The Manila Times

In rural Zimbabwe, the novel taste of a peaceful election

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NYAHUKWE, Zimbabwe: From a ruling party rally in the east, to opposition door-to-door canvassing in the northwest, Zimbabwean­s have been experienci­ng the novelty of a relatively free and peaceful election campaign.

Sitting on a wind-swept rocky slope in Nyahukwe, villagers listened to politician­s from President Mnangagwa’s ZANU-PF party in an atmosphere they said was noticeably more relaxed than under former ruler Robert Mugabe.

“This one stands out as the most peaceful campaign. No one is being beaten,” Patrick Makonde, 59, who has voted in every election since independen­ce from Britain in 1980, told AFP.

Makonde says he has seen real difference­s to previous elections.

“We are free to campaign for whosoever we like,” he said. “The youngsters are supporting their own parties, while we stick to our own party.”

Some 200 kilometers northwest, activists for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change ( MDC) campaigned door- to- door in the village of Domboshawa outside Harare, wearing their distinctiv­e red colors as they distribute­d pamphlets.

“This year is good, people are free to speak their mind, to exercise their rights, something which was previously impossible,” said Rabina Madziva, an unemployed mother of one, after meeting the MDC team.

“Under Mugabe,

they said, you should do.”

Violent past

politician­s Elections since the creation in 1999 of the MDC — the most credible opposition party — have been marred by violence, with rural voters bearing the brunt of violence, coercion and intimidati­on.

In 2008, then opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out of the presidenti­al run-off after attacks orchestrat­ed by the state and ZANU-PF claimed at least 200 of his supporters.

The run-up to this year’s election on July 30 has not been violencefr­ee — a blast narrowly missed Mnangagwa at an election rally, killing two people.

And “We The People,” a group of 7,000 citizens monitoring incidents, said it had recorded 105 reports of threats of violence and 19 cases of actual violence during the week July 9 to 15.

Perpetrato­rs have threatened “extreme violence should ZANUPF lose, or should the presidenti­al election proceed to a run-off,” said the group.

“Acts of violence included people being beaten, acts of arson, and attempted assaults,” according to the group.

Police earlier this month said they had received fewer reports of election-related violence than in previous campaigns.

And an Afrobarome­ter poll of 2,400 people countrywid­e found “a somewhat more open political atmosphere” with the opposition allowed to campaign more freely.

Mnangagwa, a ZANU-PF loyalist who took over from the ousted Mugabe in November, has vowed a free and fair vote and invited in internatio­nal poll observers — including previously-banned European Union and Commonweal­th teams.

Disputed result?

But Human Rights Watch’s Southern Africa director, Dewa Mavhinga, warned intimidati­on was occurring in some rural areas, and that violence could increase if the vote looks close or is disputed due to alleged fraud.

“Mnangagwa wants legitimacy from this election and this is why he is preaching peace... but those at the bottom in ZANU-PF are uncertain and jittery,” said Mavhinga.

“The default factory setting for ZANU-PF is violence,” he said, adding when it occurs it would be “sudden and swift because the machinery of violence remains intact. It’s just not being used.”

For now, rural voters hope the election will bring stability and economic revival after years of decline.

“I was born and raised up in a country in crisis. We hear from our parents that back then, life was good, that there was real money, money with value,” said Joseph Mvere, 22, who says he will vote

“I was still very young in 2008, but that election was terrible,” added newly married Mvere, as he headed home from buying pea seedlings for his vegetable garden.

“The situation has changed. Now we are campaignin­g more like civilized people.”

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