Saturday, April 19, 2008

Mugabe knew he lost election

Washington Post:

For two tantalizing days, Zimbabwe's opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, believed he was on the verge of becoming president. Results posted publicly after the March 29 vote clearly favored him. The ruling party was visibly split. And a top cabinet official for President Robert Mugabe had come forward, seeking negotiations for a smooth transition.

Then, after an initial round of secret talks just days after the election, an electrifying piece of news filtered back to Tsvangirai through his representatives: A cabinet minister told them that Mugabe had accepted defeat.

Tsvangirai recounted this moment with a hint of despair in an interview with The Washington Post and Toronto's Globe and Mail newspaper in a Johannesburg suburb to which he fled soon after the election. He said he was confident that Mugabe, 84, who has ruled Zimbabwe since its founding in 1980, was ready to step aside, that a nation with chronic food shortages, the world's worst inflation and a devastating flight of talent was poised for a turnaround.

The main demand from the ruling party side was amnesty for Mugabe for past misdeeds and modest representation for his party in a transitional government, Tsvangirai said. There was also a request that Mugabe be allowed to maintain a powerless figurehead position within the government, but the opposition refused, said Tsvangirai's spokesman, George Tshibotshiwa.

"The parameters were that we had won the election, that we would incorporate" Mugabe's party in the government, Tsvangirai said of the discussions. "But it would be by our own choice. And that Mugabe can exit honorably, but he has to concede defeat."

But what came next was not a public concession by Mugabe but a suddenly fierce determination to fight back.

The cabinet member, Labor Minister Nicholas Goche, mysteriously failed to appear for a third day of scheduled talks, Tsvangirai said. Soon after, police, soldiers and youth militias deployed; opposition activists were arrested, beaten and tortured by the dozens. A close-knit group of military and security officials, according to many sources, took day-to-day control of much of the government, including preparations for a runoff election that Mugabe's party abruptly said was necessary -- even though initial election results had not been announced.

"We knew that we were talking to moderates within" Mugabe's party, said Jameson Timba, one of Tsvangirai's two lead envoys, speaking from Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe. "So when the talks did not proceed, we knew that the hawks, the hard-liners, had taken over."

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And they are digging their hole even deeper. What this story really reveals is how dishonest the campaign for a recount and a runoff is. It is a fraudulent attempt to steal the election.

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