The Citizen (KZN)

Unlikely duo tackles Bob

TSVANGIRAI, MUJURU IN POLL BID TO UNSEAT ZANU-PF Former ruling party insider and MDC in election coalition to end strangleho­ld.

- Harare

One is a female former teenage guerrilla fighter who became President Robert Mugabe’s closest ally, the other is a battle-hardened opposition leader often dismissed as a busted flush.

But, despite their difference­s, Joice Mujuru and Morgan Tsvangirai are in talks to lead a united opposition alliance to try to unseat Mugabe in Zimbabwe’s much-anticipate­d election next year.

The president, 93 and increasing­ly frail, has vowed to stand again to extend his rule, which began in 1980 and has been dominated by economic collapse and political repression.

His Zanu-PF party has a strangleho­ld on government, the civil service and military, and has a record of election interferen­ce and voter intimidati­on that presents a formidable obstacle for any challenger.

“For us, it is the more the merrier in this opposition alliance,” Mujuru told AFP, speaking in the garden of her large house on the outskirts of Harare.

“This is a coming together in great numbers as a democratic force that should give confidence to our people.”

Zimbabwe’s history of violent and fraud-riddled elections has eroded public trust in voting, but the coalition leaders hope a unified alternativ­e to Mugabe will produce a high turnout that would make it harder to rig the result.

“I don’t expect Mugabe to say ‘I am going to create conditions for free and fair elections,” Tsvangirai, 65, said from his office in a tower block in central Harare.

“We need 80% participat­ion, not 40%. If there is an overwhelmi­ng verdict, there will be no one who will stand in the way of the people.”

Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party, knows first-hand the dangers of tangling with Mugabe’s regime.

Since emerging as an anti-government trade unionist in the ’80s, he has often been targeted by the security forces and was assaulted by police in 2007.

He won the most votes in the first round of the 2008 presidenti­al elections, but poll officials said it was not enough to avoid a run-off against Mugabe.

As Zanu-PF loyalists unleashed a wave of violence, Tsvangirai pulled out of the race and became prime minister in a power-sharing government in which he was widely seen as being outmanoeuv­red by Mugabe. “Zanu-PF has not won recent elections, it has rigged them,” Tsvangirai said.

“Anyone who is interested in ending Zanu-PF should unite, in spite of ideologica­l difference­s.

“I think she (Mujuru) means well. I mean well. People will realise both of us are committed to the process.”

Many of Tsvangirai’s supporters and anti-Mugabe activists view Mujuru as an untrustwor­thy opposition voice.

She served for 34 years as a loyal Zanu-PF minister and was a favourite to succeed Mugabe. As a youth, she fought in the war against colonial rule and was famed for shooting down an enemy helicopter.

But in 2014, she was ousted as the country’s vice-president in a purge when Mugabe’s wife, Grace, accused her of plotting a coup.

After forming the new National People’s Party, 62-year-old Mujuru may draw some support from former Zanu-PF voters – women, the business community and even disgruntle­d members of the military.

Seen as a relative moderate within Mugabe’s circle, she recalls working well with Tsvangirai during the 2008–2013 power-sharing government.

“For me, it was a chance of seeing Zimbabwean­s working together in a more harmonious way,” she said.

“I was one of the very few people who was always receptive to opposition parties.”

Tsvangirai, an avid golfer who is recovering from cancer, appears set to be the coalition’s presidenti­al candidate, with Mujuru in a supporting role.

“There is little doubt that Morgan should be the leader, the issue is on what grounds the support comes from others,” said Ivor Jenkins, of the In Transforma­tion Initiative, a South African pro-democracy group.

“The game-changer might be the realisatio­n that this could be their last chance,” said Jenkins.

“If they don’t take it, there are many years of bigger chaos ahead.” – AFP

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? A vulture stands on top of an African buffalo carcass at Nairobi National Park near Nairobi, Kenya.
Picture: Reuters A vulture stands on top of an African buffalo carcass at Nairobi National Park near Nairobi, Kenya.

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