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Archive for the 'Zimbabwe Blog' Category

Remember, unity

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

Our hands full or not:
The same abundance.
Our eyes open or shut:
The same light.

- Yves Bonnefoy, in The Curved Planks: Poems

Quality of ballot papers in Zimbabwe election

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

From a voter

For sure a budget election. Pictures not good. To be sure you need to be able to read, or have had an affair with the person. Example: I have warned my parents to take their time and take their glasses.

Zim Election Update

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

Reports received that several voters are not on the voting rolls where they were expected. This means they cannot vote in their constituencies, and are expected to attend thousands of kilometers away. This makes it impossible for them to vote.

Reports in also that there is a heavy presence of security personnel observing who is going in and out of polling stations.

The ballot paper is also confirmed as problematic, ZANU PF candidates are in bold, and easily identified, candidates from other parties are blurred or not easily identified.

Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum

Its not over until the fat guy takes office

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

I went to get some fuel on my way to the office this morning. The petrol attendent asked me whether I’d voted and I said no. He spent the next 5 minutes telling me passionately why I should go vote and why my vote was important. He didn’t seem particularly worried about the vast rigging that’s been taking place, instead he felt that the will of the people would trump any electoral trickery. He also said that it just wasn’t right that a 90 year old man should be governing Zimbabwe. One of his most uplifting observations was that Zimbabwe belongs to us – its citizens – and not the power toting politicians who have chosen to turn Zimbabwe into their personal playground. Finally I said, so what happens when Mugabe claims victory; what then? He said that a Mugabe victory is just not possible this time.

Zimbabwe’s 4th Chimurenga; a battle of ideas and not guns

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

Vince Musewe reminds Zimbabweans that we have a major role to play in keeping our politicians accountable and our electoral process credible. We must not accept a flawed election:

Zimbabwe’s 4th Chimurenga; a battle of ideas and not guns

As Mugabe sleeps on the bed he has created, so, must those that have been complicit in creating that bed.

It is incontrovertible that, when leadership ceases to be sensitive to the needs and aspirations of its followers, the followers will rebel and choose those leaders whom they think are most likely to represent their aspirations.

The art of leadership, therefore, is the ability to anticipate and understand the shifting trends, opinions and aspirations of the people you may seek to lead, and then act to meet those needs otherwise, one will be rendered irrelevant.

By criminalizing open dialogue, criticism, freedom to associate and stifling personal liberties, as a leader, you inadvertently starve yourself from information on new ideas and trends, which are critical for you to continue to be an effective leader. Inevitably that vacuum, is then filled by informers, spies and charlatans who manufacture and manipulate the information you get so that they may continue to gain favor from you.

That eventually makes you irrelevant as you become unaware and uninformed of the true reality on the ground. You can be then are perceived as insensitive to the needs of your followers and incompetent, no matter what good you may have done in the past.

That is the bed Mugabe has made and must now sleep on it. The use of violence and coercion, to force Zimbabweans to agree with his ideas has not created a loyal followership, but an unwilling and anxious people who will at the first opportunity they get to vote, dismiss him from power.

This is the reality that those in the military, the police and intelligence services have help him to create but are refusing to accept the inevitable consequences. As Mugabe sleeps on the bed he has made, so, must those that have been complicit in creating that bed.

The 4th chimurenga has arrived; it is a battle of ideas about the future and cannot be won through the use of a gun as was the 3rd.

I think this should be instructive to those that are seeking political power in Zimbabwe. Our politics have to change, and the relationship between the governing and the governed has to be based on respect. In order for that to happen, it is up to all of us Zimbabwean citizens to realize that as long we remain quiet and unconcerned, we are bound once more, to afford an opportunity for our leadership to abuse our vote.

I expect that we will insist that it cannot be business as usual when a new government comes into power. No longer must we expect them to shape our future without our participation. No longer must we allow them to prescribe solutions to our problems while ignoring what we think should happen.
We will need to be activists to breathe life into a new participative democracy enshrined in our new constitution. Zimbabweans can no longer be spectators in their own country nor should they be afraid.

The opening of the media space is going to be critical for this to happen. Zimbabweans have, in the past, been starved of new information that they could have used to think and act differently. This created a sense that there is no outside to ZANU (PF).

The repetitive narrative that has been regurgitated in state media sought to create conformity based on lies and the manipulation of events through the media, to justify a centralized political system with no new ideas about the future. It justified the continued political and economic domination of many by a few.

The suffering we have endured must surely be a lesson to all of us that, as long we remain passive our circumstances will not change.

In my opinion, freedom comes with responsibility and I doubt that most of us are aware of the power we have to change our circumstances.

Vince Musewe is an economist based in Harare. You may contact him on vtmusewe [at] gmail [dot] com
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What Zimbabwe needs

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Wednesday, July 31st, 2013 by Bev Clark

Our Zimbabwe needs a new vibrant, corrupt-free government which is pro-poor, people centred & respects people’s rights, freedoms & rule of law. And, more importantly uphold the constitution.
- Obvious in Chikomba East