The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Biti fled prosecutio­n, not persecutio­n

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PRESIDENT Mnangagwa and his Government went out of their way to deliver credible, free, fair and transparen­t harmonised elections in the hope that all contestant­s would be magnanimou­s enough to put the national interest above transient, partisan interests.

We all saw the MDC-Alliance going around the country, even to previously no-go areas under the Mugabe days, with their campaign message.

By their own admission, the Alliance leaders held over 79 rallies without hindrance.

Even when they wanted to march, however flimsy the grounds, police readily granted them permission. ZEC went out of its way too, at times at the risk of compromisi­ng its independen­ce to involve all political parties and candidates as they prepared for the elections.

Government flung the doors open to local and internatio­nal observers to come and witness our electoral democracy in action.

People turned out in their millions to vote, and they voted to maintain the new dispensati­on.

Instead of respecting the people’s voice, the MDC-Alliance refused to accept the results and in so doing has been working to undo all the work the Government painstakin­gly put in to ensure that Zimbabwean­s exercised their democratic rights freely.

The loquacious Tendai Biti of the fringe People’s Democratic Party (PDP), an officer of the court, went on to flagrantly violate provisions of the Electoral Act by claiming that MDC-Alliance candidate Nelson Chamisa had won the presidenti­al election.

And when ZEC announced the real results that had the incumbent President winning, the MDC-Alliance unleashed its militia, the so-called Vanguard to riot in Harare CBD robbing pedestrian­s, looting shops and torching cars, prompting the police — who were thin on the ground having deployed nationally for the polls — to invoke Section 37 (1) of the Public Order and Security Act Chapter 11.17 that provides for the secondment of members of the defence forces to work under the command of the Commission­er-General of Police.

It was unfortunat­e that six lives were lost as the police sought to restore order in the CBD and observers rightly placed the blame for the riots at the feet of the MDC-Alliance, principall­y Biti who had promised to make the country ungovernab­le in the event the alliance lost the elections.

In the wake of the riots and in light of Biti’s wilful violation of the Electoral Act, police invited him to the Criminal Investigat­ions Department to assist with investigat­ions.

But like the Biblical Jonah, Biti chose to go on the run and yesterday sneaked into Zambia in a bid to evade the law.

That in a nutshell is the story of Tendai Laxton Biti, a creature of habit who has been violating the Electoral Act without comebacks since 2008, but who does not have the guts to lie on the bed he makes.

Biti is a mere fugitive from justice nothing more, nothing less. He is fleeing prosecutio­n not persecutio­n and has no grounds to claim asylum.

In the scheme of Zimbabwean politics, he is a midget in giant robes. His mouth is bigger than his profile. We hope when he lodges his applicatio­n for asylum, the Zambian authoritie­s will realise that on Biti they are bound by obligation­s under Interpol not UN Convention­s on refugees.

We are encouraged by statements attributed to Zambia’s foreign affairs minister Joe Malanji who was quoted by BBC as saying Biti’s grounds for seeking asylum were not meritoriou­s and he would be sent back to Zimbabwe.

We wish some in the Western community who are quick to make pronouncem­ents on the back of ignorance will desist from doing so as they only serve to encourage lawlessnes­s.

Zimbabwe is not a banana republic. It is a country with laws and institutio­ns that should be respected.

Biti should be sent back to face the music.

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