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Zimbabwe parties hopeful on talks breakthrough

Reuters

Tue 9 Sep 2008, 20:20 GMT

By Cris Chinaka

HARARE (Reuters) - President Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai said on Tuesday they have made progress in power-sharing talks in
Zimbabwe and are to address outstanding issues on Wednesday.

A deal to form an all-inclusive government would end two months of wrangling
and help ease a post-election crisis that is worsening Zimbabwe's economic
decline.

A new round of talks began in Harare on Monday between Mugabe's ZANU-PF,
Tsvangirai's MDC party and a breakaway MDC faction, but prospects had looked
bleak.

A senior ZANU-PF official accused the MDC on Tuesday of "trying to put
spanners in the works", while Tsvangirai said on Sunday he would rather quit
talks than sign a bad deal.

But after several hours of meetings led by South African President Thabo
Mbeki on Tuesday, the rivals appeared hopeful a deal was in sight.

"As you are aware these talks have been dragging on for some time now, but I
must say that there is a positive development," Tsvangirai told reporters as
he left the Harare hotel after hours of negotiation, without giving more
details.

"Nothing has been concluded yet but we are hoping that tomorrow (Wednesday)
we will be able to look at the outstanding issues."

Mugabe also told reporters that progress had been made.

"We are still going to talk. We are finishing tomorrow (Wednesday)," he
said. "There is progress, and lack of it, in some areas," he said, adding
that "one or two areas" were still outstanding.

Arthur Mutambara, leader of a breakaway MDC faction, was even more
optimistic, saying "tremendous progress" had been achieved.

"... we hope tomorrow (Wednesday) we will be able to bring finality and
closure to the dialogue process," he said.

Mbeki -- mandated by the region to mediate an end the crisis -- had
presented a proposal sharing executive powers, the main sticking point in
the negotiations, the state-run Herald newspaper said.

It also looked at structuring an all-inclusive government.

SADC SUMMIT MOVED?

An MDC source told Reuters four issues remained unresolved, including the
contentious issue of who would chair the cabinet, although differences had
been narrowed.

The suggested proposal was for ministers to report to Tsvangirai as prime
minister on a daily basis, but Mugabe would still chair cabinet meetings.

Other issues included the number of ministers for each parties, which
version of the constitution the new government adhered to and how long the
transitional process would last, the source said.

The defence committee of regional grouping the SADC was due to meet in
Swaziland on Wednesday to discuss the crisis, but a senior Zimbabwe
government official said the summit may now be moved to Harare to celebrate
the signing of a power-sharing deal.

"It looks like it is a done deal. From the way I understand it, a signing
ceremony had been provisionally set for tomorrow (Wednesday)," the source,
who did not want to be named, said.

"But there are suggestions that this could be delayed a bit and we could see
the SADC troika meeting being held here to give pomp and fanfare to the
agreement."

The SADC meeting was to include the heads of state from Mozambique, Angola
and Swaziland. Mbeki and Mugabe had also been expected to attend.

The MDC leader beat Mugabe in a March 29 presidential election but fell
short of enough votes to avoid a June run-off, which was won by Mugabe
unopposed after Tsvangirai pulled out, citing violence and intimidation
against his supporters.

Mugabe's victory in the run-off was condemned around the world and drew
toughened sanctions from Western countries whose support is vital for
reviving Zimbabwe's ruined economy.

Mbeki has come under repeated fire for not being tough enough with Mugabe,
in power since 1980.

Other southern African leaders have taken a harder line, but Mugabe has
resisted pressure".

Zimbabweans were hoping the election could produce a leadership able to
tackle hyper-inflation and severe food and fuel shortages that have driven
millions across the country's borders, straining regional economies.

(Writing by Gordon Bell and Michael Georgy; Editing by Sami Aboudi)


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Zimbabwean parties on verge of deal

SABC

September 09, 2008, 22:00

Principals in Zimbabwe's power-sharing talks say they are on the verge of
clinching a deal that should see the formation of the unity government.

President Robert Mugabe and Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader
Morgan Tsvangirai this evening said all is on track and the talks looks set
to be concluded tomorrow.

After another marathon meeting that ended just before 9pm, Mugabe says there
are two outstanding issues but prospects of a deal are now brighter than
ever before.

Tsvangirai says the pact is now in sight. The opposition leader says there
are just a few sticking issues which they hope to iron out tomorrow before
sealing the deal.

His counterpart from the smaller MDC faction, Arthur Mutambara, also says he's
set for conclusion tomorrow.

Anytime from now, anything is possible is Zimbabwe. The deal may finally
bring to an end a decade long confrontation between the veteran president
and former trade unionist Tsvangirai.


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Mbeki still battling to broker Zim deal

IOL

     September 10 2008 at 06:58AM

By Peter Fabricius, Special Correspondent and Sapa-dpa

President Thabo Mbeki was late on Tuesday still trying to broker an
agreement between Zanu-PF and Zimbabwe's opposition parties.

He was due to brief a summit of the SADC troika in Swaziland on
Wednesday on the ongoing facilitation work in Zimbabwe, said Department of
Foreign Affairs spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa in a statement.

However, it was not clear last night whether Mbeki would be able to
leave Harare in time as he was still locked in negotiations with President
Robert Mugabe and Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) opposition leaders
Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara.

It is understood that Mbeki came to Harare on Monday with a slightly
different proposal from the one which Tsvangirai, leader of the main MDC
faction, had rejected before.

Tsvangirai turned down the earlier proposal because he said it left
all executive powers in the hands of Mugabe who would remain president,
leaving him as a merely ceremonial prime minister.

Sources said Mbeki's new proposal shifted some executive powers to
Tsvangirai and that Mugabe was the one who was now resisting.

Mamoepa said Mbeki had been invited to Mbabane by the current chairman
of the SADC security body, Swaziland's King Mswati.

The security body's troika comprises Swaziland, Angola and Mozambique.

The troika - with an annually- rotating membership - is the body in
charge of the Zimbabwean power-sharing negotiations and which mandated Mbeki
as mediator last year.

The talks are believed to have continued into the evening at Rainbow
Towers hotel in Harare.

Mbeki was earlier reported by the Zimbabwean state media to have
brought new proposals to the talks, which follow on a failed three-day round
of late-night talks in August.

Tsvangirai at the time backed away from a draft agreement that would
have made him prime minister, but leaving Mugabe as president in control of
the security services and cabinet.

Tsvangirai has been demanding full control of government.

The state-controlled daily Herald, quoting government sources, said
Mbeki had arrived "with a document which seeks to resolve the issue of
sharing and distributing executive powers", and would "lay the basis for the
continuation of the negotiations".

The newspaper gave no details, but quoted sources as saying it was "an
extensive and technical document".

A source close to the talks on the Zanu-PF side said Mbeki had
proposed Mugabe and Tsvangirai co-chair cabinet.

The same source however said Mugabe was "very unlikely" to agree.

The two sides were putting a tentatively positive spin on developments
on Monday.

Mugabe was saying "we are moving forward, we are not going back,"
while MDC spokesperson Nelson Chamisa was saying, "we are trying to bridge
the areas of our differences."

This article was originally published on page 2 of Pretoria News on
September 10, 2008


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Mbeki to brief SADC members on Zimbabwe

SABC

September 10, 2008, 05:45

Miranda Strydom
President Thabo Mbeki will travel to Swaziland this morning to brief the
South African Development Community (SADC) heads of state about the ongoing
Zimbabwean negotiations.

Reports from Swaziland say that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe is also
likely to attend the meeting. The SADC Troika of the Organ on Politics,
Defence and Security will meet at the Lozitha Palace outside the capital
Mbabane. Swaziland is currently chair of the organ troika which includes
Angola and Mozambique.

Today's meeting comes as reports emerge of an imminent breakthrough in the
negotiations. Last night MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai said there has been
what he called "positive developments", while Mugabe said there were still
one or two areas of disagreement. The leader of a breakaway MDC faction,
Arthur Mutambara, also expressed optimism that a deal is in sight.

Stalled power-sharing talks
President Mbeki, as the SADC appointed mediator, has been in Zimbabwe since
Monday and held meetings with President Mugabe and the leaders of the two
MDC factions.

The stalled power-sharing talks resumed on Monday after being adjourned for
more than two weeks. The sticking point was the allocation of executive
powers. President Mbeki, who is mediating the talks, is understood to have
tabled fresh proposals. Some speculate that these include a fifty-fifty
sharing of executive power.


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SADC organ meets today to discuss Zimbabwe

http://www.zimonline.co.za/

by Own Correspondent Wednesday 10 September 2008

JOHANNESBURG - The Southern African Development Community (SADC) organ
on defence and security meets in Swaziland on Wednesday to discuss progress
made in implementing an African Union resolution last July calling for a
government of national unity to end Zimbabwe's crisis.

Swaziland on Tuesday said President Robert Mugabe and SADC mediator in
the Zimbabwean crisis South African President Thabo Mbeki would attend,
alongside heads of state from Mozambique, Swaziland and Angola.

"The meeting will mainly review the status of implementation of the
African Union summit resolution on Zimbabwe," SADC said.

At its summit in Egypt the AU adopted a resolution calling for
Zimbabwe's political leaders to open negotiations leading to the formation
of a government of national unity.

Since then Mbeki has been shuttling between Harare and Pretoria in a
bid to persuade Mugabe's ZANU PF party and Morgan Tsvangirai's opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party and its splinter led by Arthur
Mutambara to reach a power-sharing deal.

Tsvangirai beat Mugabe in a March 29 election but fell short of the
margin to avoid a June run-off, which Mugabe went on to win unopposed after
Tsvangirai pulled out, citing violence and intimidation against his
supporters.

Mugabe's victory in the run-off was widely condemned.

Analysts say only a government of national unity could be able to
tackle Zimbabwe's long-running crisis marked by political violence and a
bitter recession seen in the world's highest inflation of more than 11
million percent, 80 percent unemployment, shortages of food and basic
commodities.  - ZimOnline


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Analyst Optimistic Yet Pessimistic About a Likely Zimbabwe Power-Sharing Deal

VOA

By James Butty
Washington, D.C.
10 September 2008

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
were both optimistic Tuesday after a day of talks on power-sharing.
Tsvangirai told reporters that there had been a positive development during
the negotiations in Harare. President Mugabe also reportedly said there was
progress in some areas, although he said there were still outstanding
issues.

One news account quoting Zimbabwe government sources said a possible
power-sharing agreement could even be signed Wednesday. Tsvangirai earlier
rejected a proposal for Mr. Mugabe to remain president and keep control over
Zimbabwe's security forces.

Harald Pakendorf is an independent South African political analyst. From
Cape Town, he told that if reports of a deal are true then there must have
been an added incentive offered to both sides.

"If the information is true, the implication would be that Mr. Mugabe heads
the government. He has been trying to form the government, and this would be
that Mr. Tsvangirai has accepted that he won't be in the powerful position
that he thought he would have after winning the election. I would think that
if the report is correct then there must be an added something that we don't
know about, perhaps a timeline, something which says Mr. Mugabe would serve
the government for a year and then Mr. Tsvangirai takes over or perhaps
talks of another election," he said.

Tsvangirai earlier rejected a proposal for Mr. Mugabe to remain president
and keep control over Zimbabwe's security forces.

Pakendorf said it would be a big mistake for Tsvangirai to accept a largely
ceremonial post as prime minister while giving President Mugabe extensive
executive power.

"If Mr. Mugabe has the power then he would undermine Mr. Tsvangirai in every
corner, and I'm afraid that if Mr. Mugabe is in the government, there would
be very little positive response from countries outside of Zimbabwe to help
the country rebuild itself," Pakendorf said.

He said another factor that may make possible a power-sharing deal is if
either South African President Thabo Mbeki or the Southern African
Development Community makes available an economic package to help Zimbabwe's
broken economy.

Pakendorf said he would be surprised if President Mugabe offered Tsvangirai
more power as prime minister.

"That would really be a surprise, and it would mean that the depth of the
economic strangulation in Zimbabwe has finally made the present rulers
understand that there is end to the game," he said.

Pakendorf said if the reports are correct and a power-sharing agreement is
reached Wednesday then President Thabo Mbeki, the talks' mediator, should be
given some credit for effective diplomacy, even though he said such
diplomacy might have come in the final hour of the Zimbabwe crisis.


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GNU is pure sleaze

http://www.zimonline.co.za

by Gerald Cubitt Wednesday 10 September 2008

OPINION: "Ye are grown intolerably odious to the whole nation; you were
deputed here by the people to get their grievances redressed, are yourselves
become the greatest grievance." Cromwell - 1653.

Efforts by South African President Thabo Mbeki to armtwist the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) party into a government of national unity with
President Robert Mugabe's ZANU PF party are pure sleaze.

Mugabe heads a murderous regime. Endeavours to coerce the MDC into a
political alliance with ZANU PF are morally odious: they are akin to
pressuring a victim of abuse to remain in a violent, predatory relationship
for the sake of form.

The very idea is sordid, dishonourable: evil. More especially as Mbeki's
motive is to rescue Mugabe rather than the downtrodden people of Zimbabwe.

Mugabe's legitimacy derives from the barrel of the gun and the jackboot, in
the circumstances, the ANC's mantra: the people of Zimbabwe must sort out
their own problems is cynical and cruelly rapacious.

On March 29, the voters of Zimbabwe went to the polls in an effort to do
precisely what the ANC was exhorting them to do - sort out their own
problems. In no uncertain terms, a sizeable and undisputed majority of
Zimbabweans, despite a political playing field heavily tilted in favour of
the ruling party, told Mugabe to pack his bags and head off into the sunset.

They did this at considerable risk to life and limb. One would reasonably
have expected the Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries,
especially South Africa which purports to be committed to a Zimbabwean
solution to the problem, to support them.

To come down on the side of the people Mbeki would have had to jettison
Mugabe.

So, instead, the people of Zimbabwe were hung out to dry while they endured
Mugabe's wrath. He made them pay dearly for exercising the most basic of
democratic rights - voting for a party and candidates of their choice while
Mbeki and most of the other SADC heads of state looked the other way.

By the time Mugabe and his goons paused for breath, more than a hundred MDC
supporters had been brutally murdered. Many hundreds had been savagely
assaulted; tortured so badly they will carry the physical and psychological
scarring for the rest of their lives.

In addition thousands more, mostly peasants, were dispossessed and driven
from their land and homes.

One wonders what Mbeki and his peers were thinking while all this was
happening. One cannot imagine that they did not know about the violence.
Their cowardly silence amounts to a wink and nod to Mugabe to do as he
pleases. Complicity, in short.

What must rate as one of the most bizarre and stupid statements ever made by
a South African politician was Mbeki saying there was no crisis in Zimbabwe.

He made the remark some two weeks after the election when no results had
been released yet. He made the statement in a country, and about a country,
where the rule of law had collapsed; a country where institutional violence
had become the norm; a country with an economy in freefall and where misrule
and corruption had resulted in a breakdown of family and community life,
education and health services and other life-sustaining infrastructure; a
country which had lost a quarter of its population as political and economic
refugees.

It is a country where most people are unemployed and hungry, where many
hundreds of thousands have been condemned to a premature grave by hunger and
disease and where many thousands live without proper shelter, potable water
and proper sanitation.

In short, a country where the very existence of most of the population is a
tale of degrading misery without hope while Mugabe's tyranny holds sway.

As bizarre as the content of Mbeki's statement, was the setting in which it
was made. At the time, he was walking smiling, hand-in-hand with Mugabe,
while they wore garlands around their necks.

His statement and the occasion exhibited a callous disregard for all the
people of Zimbabwe who have suffered and died because of the moral cowardice
of the SADC leadership that since 2000 has been prepared to look the other
way while Mugabe flouted the rules of civilised political behaviour.

Where Zimbabwe is a signatory to the various SADC treaties and protocols
that among others prescribe the conduct of free and fair elections, respect
for the rule of law and human rights, etc, one has to wonder how the recent
summit in South Africa arrived at the conclusion that after the June 27
fiasco Mugabe should be seated as a head of state.

What makes the decision even more puzzling is that none of the observer
missions (SADC, Pan-African Parliament and the African Union) allowed into
the country for the June 27 run-off, found that the election had been free
and fair or that he had produced a credible, legitimate result that
reflected the will of the people.

One appreciates that SADC, as a political grouping, may differ in its
opinions from those of the Pan-African Parliament and the African Union,
dismissing the observations and conclusions of its own observer mission is a
vote of no-confidence in its own political integrity and seriously
undermines SADC's international standing as a political entity deserving of
dignity and esteem.

A further thought regarding a government of national unity with Mugabe
derives from Joshua Nkomo's experience. We hear a great deal about how the
veteran nationalist was betrayed and destroyed by Mugabe.

However, Tsvangirai would probably be wiser to bear in mind the awful fate
of Herbert Chitepo, an eminent Zimbabwean lawyer who headed ZANU during the
1960s and 70s while Mugabe was imprisoned by the Ian Smith government.

One could reasonably argue that Mugabe and Nkomo were competitors, and
hence, the animosity between them. However, the same cannot be said for the
relationship between Mugabe and Chitepo. They were allies, colleagues, and
comrades in arms.

Yet, Mugabe had no qualms about blowing up Chitepo when he got out of prison
in Zimbabwe and wanted the top spot in ZANU.

Chitepo was an eminent black lawyer who played a major role in the genesis
of the nationalist movements opposing the Smith government during the 1960s
and 70s. He rose to become the head of ZANU that functioned in exile out of
Lusaka.

When Mugabe was released from prison at the behest the then South African
Prime Minister, John Voster in 1974, he fled to Lusaka where he became
embroiled in a power struggle for the leadership of ZANU.

Then already, he showed that he wasn't squeamish when it came to
bloodletting where someone stood in the way of his ambition and lust for
power.

Chitepo was blown up in the driveway of his home in Lusaka in 1975.

Thereafter, Mugabe and his co-conspirators fled to Mozambique to avoid the
investigation into his death.

It is worth noting that the power struggle was perpetuated in the camps in
Mozambique where many of Mugabe's competitors were murdered, imprisoned and
brutalised.

Cozying up to Mugabe - with his degrees in violence - is about as foolish as
getting into bed knowing there is a scorpion hiding between the sheets. -
ZimOnline


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Makoni postpones launch of political party

http://www.zimonline.co.za/

by Cuthbert Nzou Wednesday 10 September 2008

HARARE - Zimbabwe's former finance minister Simba Makoni has put on
hold plans to launch a political party, amid reports that a movement formed
to back his failed presidential bid last March was on the verge of
collapsing.

Makoni staged a dramatic rebellion against President Robert Mugabe to
challenge the veteran leader in the March 29 presidential election, running
under the banner of Mavambo/Kusile/Dawn movement which he claimed at the
time had the backing of several more senior officials of the ruling ZANU PF
party disgruntled by Mugabe's rule.

Both Makoni and Mugabe lost the March poll to main opposition MDC
leader Morgan Tsvangirai who however failed to garner the mandatory votes to
land the presidency, resulting in the June 27 second round run-off election
won by Mugabe after the opposition boycotted the poll because of political
violence.

Sources in Makoni's movement said plans to turn it into a full fledged
political party this month were frozen after the three southern Matabeleland
provinces that had appeared more receptive to the movement threatened to
pull out citing gross mismanagement of the organisation.

Makoni had planned to launch his political party that is to be known
as the National Alliance for Democracy (NAD) on September 13 but had to
shelve his plans after the provinces of Bulawayo, Matabeleland North and
South wrote to him threatening to quit over the way the Mavambo movement was
being run.

"There is chaos in the Mavambo movement at the moment and Makoni has
decided to put on ice plans to launch NAD," a member of the movement's
management committee said. "The three Matabeleland provinces have written to
Makoni saying they were contemplating leaving the project."

The letter by the three provinces came barely a fortnight after former
home affairs minister and Makoni's main backer in his presidential bid,
Dumiso Dabengwa, abandoned the movement.

In a letter to Makoni, a copy of which was shown to ZimOnline, the
three provinces' steering committee said it was dismayed by the manner in
which its contributions to the formation of the party had been handled by
the movement's head office in Harare.

"We would like to remind you that we are equal human beings and that
we were ill-treated for a long time under similar circumstances, and cannot
live to repeat this," the letter read.

"We have seen the superiority complex displayed by individuals at 'the
head office' which is run like a family outfit and are very unhappy to be
part of this, and particularly detest the arrogance, lack of foresight and
leadership that has so far been displayed."

The three provinces complained about unequal allocation of resources
to movement members and told Makoni they would be cutting ties with him if
he did not call a consultative meeting to address the various issues raised
in the letter.

Godfrey Chanetsa, the Mavambo spokesperson, conceded that there were
problems in the movement but took issue with disgruntled members for
resorting to the media instead of raising their grievances through internal
movement structures.

"I am wondering why some people want us to address issues of Mavambo
in the media. Those that feel they have grievances know what the party
structures are and they should be free to approach the head office and these
matters shall be thrashed out at that forum. There is absolutely no need to
ty and resolve our matters in the media," Chanetsa said.

He confirmed that plans to launch NAD have been put on hold. -
ZimOnline

 


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Zanu-PF orders purge of Masvingo executive

http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=3761

September 10, 2008

By Owen Chikari

MASVINGO - An initiative to purge the Zanu-PF Masvingo provincial executive
of known critics of President Robert Mugabe's continued rule has been
instituted.

The provincial executive which comprises mostly of retired senior army
officers, faces the chop in a restructuring exercise sanctioned by the party's
political commissar Elliot Manyika.

It emerged yesterday that a long-standing power struggle between former army
commander, Retired General Solomon Mujuru and former rural housing and
social amenities minister Emmerson Mnangagwa will claim its latest
casualties within the Masvingo executive.

Sources say Manyika had ordered the restructuring of the party in the
province amid reports that all those regarded as being aligned to the Mujuru
faction should be stripped of their party posts in favour of functionaries
viewed as being sympathetic to Mnangagwa.

Manyika, who was a minister without portfolio in government, yesterday
confirmed he had ordered the restructuring exercise in Masvingo, adding that
all those who did not toe the party line would face the chop.

"The idea of the exercise is to make sure that we have people who support
the party with all their hearts", said Manyika.

"If we find that the provincial executive in Masvingo is not doing a good
job then we are now saying goodbye to it."

The Masvingo provincial executive consists mainly of retired army officers
who are believed to be loyal to the Mujuru faction.

Among those in the executive are chairman, retired Major Alex Mudavanhu,
vice-chairman retired major Clever Mumbengegwi, retired colonel Claudius
Makova, and Zimbabwe Football Association boss, Henirietta Rushwaya.

Former spokesman of the party in the province retired major Kudzai Mbudzi
was shown to the door after he became critical of Mugabe at the beginning of
the year.

Mbudzi immediately joined former finance minister Simba Makoni's Mavambo
project.

Mudavanhu, who took over from Daniel Shumba - now leader of United People's
Party president - as party provincial chairman, yesterday confirmed that the
restructuring had been imposed on the provincial executive.

"We have a restructuring exercise which was forced on us by Mr Manyika,"
said Mudavanhu. I hope it is aimed at re-organising the party and not at
destroying it.

The tug-of-war within the ruling party between Mujuru and Mnangagwa is
believed to have already claimed victims, amid reports Mugabe dropped all
governors believed to be linked to the Mujuru camp.

In Masvingo Willard Chiwewe was replaced as governor by Titus Maluleke.
Others governors removed from office include Ray Kaukonde of Mashonaland
East and Manicaland's Tinaye Chigudu.

Kaukonde and Chigudu were replaced by Enias Chigwedere and Christopher
Mushowe respectively, both of them former government ministers.


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Zimbabwe bloggers shine a light on their troubled country

http://www.latimes.com

With most independent newspapers shut down by Mugabe's regime, activists -- 
and even a diplomat -- have turned to the Internet.
By Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
7:31 PM PDT, September 9, 2008
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA -- The blogger calls himself a "fat white man"
and jokes about the right way to approach a cordon of Zimbabwean riot
police: Don't wear an opposition T-shirt, or ask for the results of the
recent one-man presidential runoff. Instead, greet them with a breezy "Good
morning! How are you, sirs?"

"I note that there are no officers in the line, which is good as it means
there's nobody to order the cops to start hitting me," he writes. "But then
again if they do start hitting me there's no one to tell them to stop."

The "fat white man" is not just some cheeky cyberdissident -- he's a British
diplomat named Philip Barclay. His blog is found on the official British
Foreign Office website.

Barclay's exhilaratingly undiplomatic
https://blogs.fco.gov.uk/roller/harare/, veers from humor reminiscent of
P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves books to bleak horror. Zimbabwe, he says, is a
country where "good manners and repression go hand-in-hand."

With most of Zimbabwe's independent newspapers shut down by President Robert
Mugabe's authoritarian regime, bloggers and cyberactivists fill the vacuum.
It's a world peopled with intelligence agents from the old white-led
Rhodesian government, pumping out news updates; fleeing journalists who have
parachuted into the wide, blue freedom of the Internet; and emigres who left
the country 10 or 15 years ago but can't get it out of their systems. But
the most compelling blogs are from the people who have stayed home.

There are those who write everything in red, capitalized italics, calling
for the violent removal of Mugabe. There are whimsical letters from the
bush. There's poetry. And there's more than the occasional outbreak of
whining.

In short, it's a world filled with as much paranoia, rumor, frustration,
stoicism, humor, rage and wild hope as the country itself.

Bev Clark, who calls herself an "electronic activist" and helped found a
website named kubatana.net, portrays Zimbabwe's bizarre contradictions and
numbing frustrations with wry, cynical humor that sometimes bubbles into
anger.

Comrade Fatso, a lanky, dreadlocked Zimbabwean poet whose real name is Samm
Farai Monro, elegantly captures the atmosphere of a country that is waiting,
trapped, afraid.

Cathy Buckle, a 51-year-old divorcee and author who lost her farm in
Mugabe's land seizures, posts angry, poignant letters on cathybuckle.com
about the bare supermarket shelves, the deprivations of Zimbabwe's "Fourth
World" conditions, and the Msasa tree leaves pattering on her roof,
promising a new season and hope.

Kubatana.net, founded by Clark and her partner, Brenda Burrell, organizes
protests and sends out newsletters and text messages to reach people in a
country where only a few use the Internet. Other sites clip and disseminate
news from foreign media, adding their own commentaries in garish fonts.

What shines through it all are the small, colorful transactions of life,
like bright postage stamps winking from a mountain of brown-paper parcels.

Barclay writes about meeting Marita, a teenage orphan who says she has HIV.
It is just after the government has lopped 10 zeros off the currency because
of galloping hyperinflation:

"Marita reminds me that she has not yet eaten and needs $200,000,000,000 to
do so. I give her two shiny little new $10 coins and explain that they are
worth the same as two hundred billion old dollars. She clearly does not
believe me and gives me a filthy look -- the look one gives a man who cheats
poor, sick girls -- and stalks off."

Some afternoons Clark and the other Kubatana activists turn up their music
loud in their suburban Harare office. They play the Nigerian hip-hop artist
Dr Alban -- " . . . freedom is our goal . . . " -- and sing their hearts
out.

Clark cut her teeth as a white gay activist in the 1980s and '90s, at a time
when Mugabe called homosexuality "sub- animal behavior" and said gays and
lesbians had no rights and should be arrested.

In the 1980s, when she published a gay and lesbian newsletter, Clark's
office was raided by about eight police officers searching for "pornographic
materials," which turned out to mean a booklet listing gay, lesbian and
bisexual support groups.

These days, when worn down by the business of agitating for change, Clark
retreats into a bubble bath in her home in Harare, the capital. That is,
when there are any bubbles left in her bottle. Or any water in her tap.

She writes: "In no particular order, I'm fed up with: a) vendors selling me
overpriced trays of eggs whilst I'm crossing the road; b) dead of night
tsotsis (criminals) stealing telephone cables rendering all phones kaput; c)
my hunting dog waking me up at 4am, 3 nights in a row; d) civil society fear
merchants who say Don't Do A Damned Thing, or we'll provoke a state of
emergency in Zimbabwe; e) Mugabe; f) waiting."

The funny, angry woman of the Kubatana blog seems a little ironed down and
formal in a phone interview. But Clark's passion rises when talking about
the need to jack open Zimbabwe's democratic space.

She has no illusions about the risks and difficulties involved, but can't
understand why Zimbabwean human rights groups release reports in
Johannesburg or New York -- anywhere but in Harare.

Sometimes her rubbish-strewn, potholed home city gets to her, but you get
the sense she wouldn't be comfortable anywhere more comfortable.

Zimbabweans often give out mob justice like food at a ZANU [Mugabe's ruling
party] rally," he writes. "We tend to vent our life-anger onto a thief who
dared to steal a bar of chocolate and a loaf of bread. We tend to leave the
creators of our misery in the luxury of freedom."

For a time, Zimbabweans dared hope that their waiting was over. After
first-round presidential and parliamentary elections in March, in which the
opposition scored more votes than ZANU-PF, people were electric with
optimism, even as they feared it was too good to be true.

"We await the rigging. We await the victory. With a hesitant joy. And a
bounce in our step," wrote Comrade Fatso in the long wait before election
results were finally released more than a month after the vote.

The fat white man got caught up in the optimism too. He described the mood
in the Foreign Office blog. Before the March voting, Barclay and his driver,
Elvis, sped around the country, observing. As he left one political meeting,
a woman pointed and said: "That party has a fat white man. We should go to
their rally."

The political meetings involved dancing, chanting, speeches and deep
ululation that set Barclay's heart racing. On election night, he watched the
count in a remote settlement called Bikisa, in Masvingo province, always a
Mugabe stronghold. He assumed the big pile of votes was for Mugabe.

But he was wrong. The big pile was for opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.

"I force myself to keep breathing steadily; fainting at this point would not
become an officer of Her Majesty's Government."

But the hope -- and Barclay's levity -- was not to last. Mugabe and his
cronies and "securocrats" clung to power; the ruling party unleashed
violence against the opposition.

On the day of the runoff election, everything was closed. Clark and her
partner, Burrell, didn't vote in the election, which Tsvangirai had
boycotted because of the violence. Instead, they drove out looking at
polling stations in suburban Harare.

With gangs of youth militias in the suburbs, Clark had a can of mace in her
backpack, though she wasn't sure what she would do if it was really needed.

"It made me feel a tiny bit safer."

They decided to drop in on friends, Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlongu.
In jail. The activists from Women of Zimbabwe Arise, arrested for a protest,
had been in Chikurubi Female Prison for a month.

Inside the prison, it was a dusty 10-minute walk to see their friends, past
lots of laundry drying out.

They sat for half an hour on a rough wooden bench talking to Williams and
Mahlongu.

Then they passed gifts through holes in the fence: an orange, potato chips,
sweets and personal hygiene items. But the prison guard wouldn't allow a jar
of honey.

Later Clark took a bath, but she couldn't relax, fuming at the fate of her
friends.

"They've had enough of sleeping on a concrete floor," she wrote on her blog.
"They want to go home."

Some of the loudest of the jostling cybervoices are in Zimbabwe's distant
diaspora. But Clark wishes Zimbabwean journalists running news websites from
outside the country and cyberactivists would come home and force open a
window from inside the country. She believes that Zimbabweans have to stand
up for democracy and media freedom, and that the best place to do it is in
Zimbabwe.

The place can look more frightening from outside, she said in the interview.

"I think that as Zimbabweans we have spent too much time accommodating this
dictatorship one way or another. One of the things we have to address is
this self-censorship."

She laments in her blog that Zimbabweans sometimes give in to fear too
easily, and she wonders "what it will take for Zimbabweans to rise up and
liberate themselves."

But as much as Zimbabweans live with fear and anger, writes the poet Comrade
Fatso, they also live with hope. It soars or crashes on the wind of every
rumor.

"We are so close to that sun on the horizon," he writes. "I can almost see
it through the dust. We need to walk together towards the sunset. We need to
be crazy enough to keep hope alive."

robyn.dixon@latimes.com

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