Earlier this year the Helen Suzman
Foundation carried out the first national opinion survey to be
conducted in Zimbabwe for a long time. Its purpose was to provide all
political actors, the press and civil society with a political road map
of a society whose political contours have long been invisible under
one party dominance. The results were striking. Held in February at
exactly the same time as the constitutional referendum, our findings
cast considerable doubt on the validity of the referendum result. In
Harare and Bulawayo, where ballot stuffing was all but impossible, our
results tallied almost exactly with the official results but everywhere
else our estimate of anti-government opinion was far higher than the
referendum suggested. It looked very much as if the government had
rigged the referendum - but still lost it.
Overall we found that only 35 per cent wanted Zanu-PF (Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front) to continue in power and that
63 per cent thought it was time for a change. 75 per cent wanted the
powers of the president reduced, 69 per cent thought the president
should resign after two terms and 65 per cent wanted President Mugabe
to step down right away. Moreover 69 per cent said they were
dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with the government and 68 per cent
lacked confidence that the government was telling the truth.
On the other hand opposition feeling had yet to crystallise fully. Our
poll showed that in a presidential race Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of
the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), still lagged behind Mugabe
but half either refused to answer this question or said they were
uncertain. Nonetheless, the auguries for the MDC were very good. Many
voters were only just becoming aware of them and after the referendum
victory the momentum was clearly on their side. They were drawing
enormous crowds to their meetings and could reasonably aim at winning
60 per cent or more of the vote. After twenty years in which the only
choice of president had been Robert Mugabe most of the don't knows,
won't says and undecideds were probably saying "not Mugabe".
The overwhelming impression from the survey was that the president and
his party had simply outstayed their welcome. The government was out of
touch: its concerns were no longer the same as those of the voters.
Whereas Mugabe endlessly harped on the land question and inveighed
against whites, the survey showed that only 9 per cent thought the land
question was the most important issue and 55 per cent wanted things to
stay just as they were on the land and a further 13 per cent even
thought that white farmers who had left should be invited back. As many
as 80 per cent thought it was not sensible to blame the whites for the
country's problems. Voters overwhelmingly blamed the government not
only for the wretched state of the economy but for its failure to solve
the land question.
Unfortunately, as the message began to sink in that the government was
facing defeat, Mugabe and Zanu-PF fell back on the use of
state-sponsored terror to try to change the electoral arithmetic. Only
in South Africa are the farm invasions still seen as being about the
land issue: elsewhere commentators have realised that this is merely a
cover for a campaign of intimidation which has included mass beatings,
torture, organised gang rapes and murder.
This should come as no surprise. Zanu-PF presents itself as the party
which won the liberation struggle but this is only partly true. Even at
the end the two guerrilla armies, Zanla and Zipra, were unable to match
the Rhodesian forces militarily, let alone defeat them in the way that,
for example, the Vietnamese defeated the French. Instead Zanu - which
is still what Zanu-PF boils down to - has been a successful terrorist
party, a phenomenon seen elsewhere in Africa, in Algeria and Namibia,
for example. Such a party knows that most people on the other side have
some other place to go and that if it keeps up its terror campaign long
enough its opponents will simply sue for peace and many will
leave.
Zanu was born with a petrol-bomb in its hand: when it split from Zapu
(Zimbabwe African People's Union) in 1963 it established its presence
in the Harare townships in the most forceful way possible. This worked
- and there were, in any case, no elections around to fight. Then from
1974 on, basing itself in Mozambique, Zanla waged an increasingly
successful guerrilla struggle within Rhodesia. While there were fire
fights with the Rhodesian forces, the emphasis of this struggle was
terrorist - the "taking out" of farmers and their families and, even
more, the exertion of pressure on the black peasantry to take their
side. The Rhodesian forces used similar tactics so that ordinary black
people were often caught in a terrifying two-way squeeze. But no one
should doubt Zanla's ruthlessness with its own people: villagers who
were declared "sell-outs" would have their ears and lips cut off "to
encourage the others".
Inevitably, Zanu's dependence on such methods led to an extreme form
of "vanguardist" arrogance. The party leadership, with no experience of
electoral democracy, decided on policy, tactics and strategy and the
duty of the masses was to fall into line behind it. If the masses
hesitated that merely meant that they needed to be "mobilised" and
"re-educated". If they didn't see the point of that pretty quickly then
it could only be because they were agents of colonialism in which case
they had to be punished in exemplary fashion. Again, this worked.
When, finally, the Smith regime succumbed and agreed to a universal
suffrage election Mugabe's instinct was to refuse: he had no trust in
the hustings and would far rather come to power by the means which had
served him so well already. But Tanzania's President Nyerere and
Mozambique's President Machel were adamant that Zanu had to accept the
democracy it had always said it was fighting for - and Mugabe
reluctantly had to go along. Even so, Zanla cheated outrageously.
Theoretically the guerrillas were supposed to be confined to assembly
camps so as to allow a peaceful civilian election but large numbers of
Zanla guerrillas continued to roam the villages. The governor, Lord
Soames, faced the fact that in almost a third of the country Zanla made
it impossible for anyone other than Zanu to campaign and that
intimidation was rife. As one observer put it, "eight or nine parties
are carrying out political campaigns while one (Zanu) is carrying out a
paramilitary campaign". In some cases anti-Zanu activists and
candidates simply disappeared - one after he was last seen having red
hot coals poured down his throat. But Zanu's trump card was that if it
did not win, the war would go on: only a Zanu victory could bring
peace. Soames, fearing war above all, buckled and let Mugabe get away
with it. Ironically, the terror was probably unnecessary: in 1980
Mugabe would have won a truly free election. But by this stage Zanu's
reliance on terror was almost second nature.
Just how ruthless Zanu was prepared to be with ordinary black people
became more evident than ever during the Gukurahundi (which in Shona
means "the rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains"),
that is the campaign of the fearsome 5 Brigade (commanded by Colonel
Perence Shiri) against Matabeleland dissidents in 1983-87. 5 Brigade
used almost every imaginable means of terror against the civil
population. The most typical technique was to gather villagers at
assembly camps where 5 Brigade soldiers would flog and beat them while
making them sing Zanu-PF songs all night long. These sessions would go
all the way to and beyond physical exhaustion and would usually climax
with the public torture and execution of that day's selected victims.
Generally between one and twelve people were executed but the record
was set at Lupane where 62 were executed in a single public
ritual.
Even ten years later it took great courage for the Catholic Commission
for Justice and Peace and the Legal Resources Foundation to publish
their authoritative report on these atrocities, Breaking the Silence:
Building True Peace. They document in shocking detail the victims'
story: of those they interviewed all had suffered psychological torture
of one kind or another; 99 per cent had been beaten, 97 per cent
severely, 73 per cent had suffered severe beatings of the head, 54 per
cent electrical torture, 34 per cent extreme physical exhaustion, 33
per cent severe climatic stress (eg being kept out in the sun for days
without water), 29 per cent asphyxiation, 29 per cent beating on the
soles of the feet, 20 per cent severe beating of the genitals, 19 per
cent "submarine" drowning torture and so on. Many were tortured by
having burning plastic dripped onto their bodies and inevitably there
was a great deal of hut-burning and rape. At least 5,000 died. The
Mugabe government has never acknowledged, let alone apologised for,
this campaign of atrocity against its own population.
The result was the mass traumatisation of rural Matabeleland, a
condition that persists to the present: the HSF survey found that rural
Ndebele were still mortally terrified that a word against Zanu-PF might
bring 5 Brigade knocking at the door next day. But, of course, word of
the Gukurahundi also spread through the rest of the population and
Zanu's fearsome image was reinforced by outbreaks of violence at every
election. The HSF survey found that only 21 per cent of voters believed
that nobody in their community was frightened of Zanu-PF. 13 per cent
said a few were, 16 per cent that some were, 33 per cent that most were
and 8 per cent that everyone was frightened. Only 30 per cent felt
confident that they could criticise the government freely without harm
befalling them. 61 per cent said they would be worried about joining a
demonstration even if they agreed with it and 52 per cent said it would
be difficult, very difficult or impossible to vote differently from the
way the police, security police and Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) wanted. Without any doubt at all these figures would all be far
higher today and in that sense a free and fair election has, for some
time now, been impossible.
Not surprisingly, Namibia's President Nujoma and Mugabe have always
felt a strong affinity. Both headed liberation movements against white
minority rule, both shared Marxist beliefs, both led parties based on a
majority ethnic group and both used terrorist tactics against the
minority groups and, indeed, against those within their own group who
stepped out of line. Thus Nujoma has been continuously dogged by
questions over dissidents in Swapo (South West African People's
Organisation) who were tortured and murdered on trumped up charges.
Nujoma finally won his liberation election on terms almost identical to
Mugabe's. Swapo's guerrillas in the People's Liberation Army of Namibia
(Plan) were also supposed to stay in their camps but, on Mugabe's
advice, Nujoma ordered them to stream south in their thousands just
before the March 1990 election. Mugabe had counselled Nujoma on what an
enormous advantage one could gain thereby: "the boys" would head for
their home villages and by a mixture of military machismo and
intimidation make sure of a 100 per cent Swapo vote. Once again, it was
quite unnecessary - Swapo would have won a fair election without this
muscular reinforcement.
Unfortunately for Plan, the South West African/South African forces
were not as compliant as Soames had been in Zimbabwe and they quickly
killed some 600 of the invaders and drove the others back towards
Angola. But Swapo was able to prevent other parties from campaigning in
Ovamboland where more than half the voters lived. Nujoma remains close
to Mugabe: it comes as no surprise that Nujoma has now chimed in with
plans to expropriate white farmers in Namibia and that Mugabe, speaking
at an Africa Day rally in northern Namibia last month, urged black
Namibians to emulate his land grab.
Mugabe's thinking is clear. It is a known fact that the masses oppose
colonialism and support liberation. Zanu was the party of liberation so
it follows that the masses support Zanu-PF. If they don't then it can
only be because they have been manipulated or intimidated by the
historic enemy, the white farmers. So they must be "mobilised",
re-educated, if necessary disciplined. If Mugabe loses, that means that
the forces of colonialism - symbolised by the white farmer - must be
winning and that is unbearable. The historic enemy must be dealt with
now.
Against this background it should come as no surprise that Mugabe has
again opted for a campaign of terrorism against his opponents which,
from the beginning, has served him well. Thus entrenched, the Zanu-PF
elite has used its power to feather its nest - what else is power for?
Mugabe has been happy to accept electoral anointment by the majority.
Now that majority is threatened he has fallen back on what he knows
best. Naturally, there is straightforward electoral cheating, with the
opposition denied knowledge of the delimitation proposals and other
forms of manipulation. But above all there is terror. The terror
campaign of 2000 bears all the old hallmarks: the organised gang-rapes,
the systematic beatings, the hut-burning, the sinister re-education
sessions with the forced singing of Zanu-PF songs, the torture - some
of it carried out in the surgery of "war veterans' leader" Dr Chenjerai
"Hitler" Hunzvi - and the murders. Once again the red berets of 5
Brigade ride terrifyingly through the countryside and once again one
can discern the arrogant assumption that the liberation vanguard knows
best and that its will must be done.
What is at stake in Zimbabwe is more than the plight of individuals or
political parties. The rule of law, prospects for multiparty democracy
and for future economic development are all on the line. An ageing
liberation culture is being broken on the anvil of its own corruption
and arrogance but in its death agony it is willing to pull the whole
country down with it. It may succeed for a little longer but its demise
is now certain. Even if Zanu-PF can terrorise the electorate into
giving it a fresh majority, there is no escape via that route. The
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and other donors will want
nothing to do with such a regime, the economy will spiral down and with
it the government. For the sake of Zimbabwe - and in the interests of
all democrats in southern Africa - one must hope that ordinary
Zimbabweans, hard-pressed as they are, will find the courage on June
24-25 to vote for a different future.
R.W. Johnson is
director of the Foundation.