The Citizen (Gauteng)

Zanu-PF ‘sore losers’

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

Zimbabwe’s ruling party, Zanu-PF, were not likely to be defeated in yesterday’s election without a fight, experts have warned.

Zimbabwean­s took to the polls less than a year after the country’s military, aided by Zanu-PF, forced former president Robert Mugabe to resign after clinging to power for over 37 years,

While the popularity of Nelson Chamisa, the 40-year-old leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) sparked expectatio­ns of a new dawn in Zimbabwe, Zanu-PF was still well-entrenched and famously powerful and militant in its political manoeuvres, said Derek Matyszak, researcher at the Institute for Security Studies.

“If it looks like the opposition party is winning, the state will simply shut down the results process. If Chamisa looks like he is winning, we will likely not see those election results,” he said.

“Zimbabwe’s problems will continue whether Chamisa or Mnanagwa wins.”

President Emmerson Mnangagwa was favoured by the internatio­nal community, he said. “Chamisa has few allies in the internatio­nal community. Everybody wants to see Mnanagwa win because of his promise of the normalisat­ion of Zimbabwean politics.

“The British have hardly concealed their preference to Mnanagwa, although their official position has been that as long as the election is free and fair, they will be happy.”

Allen Munoriyarw­a, a researcher who was writing his PhD on the study of several past Zimbabwe elections, said the election may have been held too soon after the unseating of Mugabe. “After the demise of the Mugabe regime, people expected a unity government to preside over building economic stability, then managing fresh elections. But that did not happen.

“Historical­ly, Zanu-PF has always been a sore loser and it has always complained after an election. In 2008, they were challengin­g almost everything. It can be expected that if they lose, they will try to challenge it.”

But yesterday it was the MDC which took the first shot at discrediti­ng the election process, saying “unnecessar­y delays” in urban areas were being used to suppress Chamisa’s supporters’ right to a vote.

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