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Zimbabwe's mock elections

Rose Benton

Published 28 March 2008

Zimbabwe Vigil coordinator Rose Benton on the vote in Zimbabwe and how her group plans to hold "mock elections" because they are convinced the results will be rigged

Every Saturday since October 2002 the Zimbabwe Vigil, which I coordinate, has held protests at the Zimbabwe Embassy. The Observer describes us as the largest regular demonstration in London. I suppose they are right. But it’s not really about numbers. In the early days we were sometimes down to only a handful of participants but now we regularly have 200 people a week.

I was born in Zimbabwe (so was my father) but we left in the late 1960s because my husband and I did not like the government. Since then we have lived in the UK and brought up our children here though we are in regular contact with relatives who remained in Zimbabwe.

In 2000 one of my sisters in Zimbabwe was very distressed about the way things were going. She asked “Is there anything you can do there to help?” I visited her in 2001 and saw for myself how bad things were. We got Zim $100 to £1 and everywhere we went there was desperation. When we visited the Matobo National Park, the people selling craftwork said they seldom saw anyone – we tried to buy one item from each person just to help them survive. I was taken to see the farm where I had been brought up. It had been occupied by Zimbabwean African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) war veterans. Now it is derelict.

When I returned to London I joined a group of like-minded people and from this group the Vigil started and I became co-ordinator.

It has been an interesting ride in our five years of protests during all weathers. We meet the varied passers-by who go down the Strand and they have been overwhelmingly sympathetic. We have lobbied and petitioned: the UN, the EU, the British government, the African Union, the Southern African Development Community, President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, etc. Every year we have said it can’t last another year and it does.

We are constantly in touch with people in Zimbabwe and we have held extra protests to mirror protests there. We have held mock elections here in 2002 and 2005 marking elections at home only for our hopes to be dashed when the elections are stolen through violence, stuffed ballot boxes and a rigged voters’ roll.

Once again there are elections in Zimbabwe this coming weekend and once again the Zimbabwe Vigil is staging a mock election outside the Zimbabwe Embassy in London on Saturday March 29th. This time the Vigil has no hope that the elections will not be rigged. We are planning media events to show how the elections will be stolen: an actor in a Mugabe mask stuffing the ballot box, army and police welcoming friendly observers and turning away Western observers, dead voters jumping our of coffins to line up to vote, etc.

Well, Mugabe will announce his Presidency next week (the counting of votes has been moved to a command centre manned by the army) but will this be allowed to stand this time? The ruined economy may be his downfall and his own party may ensure he is not allowed to continue. You now need Zim $130,000,000 to buy one pound sterling. Compare that to Zim $100 in 2001. Since then the governor of the bank of Zimbabwe has taken 3 zeros off the currency so in reality today’s figure is Zim $130,000,000,000. What inflation rate is that? I can’t work out the zeros.

People are really suffering in Zimbabwe. An old friend, a Zimbabwean pastor, came to see me the other day and said people just can’t go on. I think he is right and things must change this year. Apart from anything else I want my Saturdays back for when my first grandchild arrives later this year.

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6 comments from readers

David Lindsay
28 March 2008 at 17:53

At least the Zimbabwean election is honest. The candidates and parties really are different, unlike here. And the rigging is of the perfectly transparent old school, unlike in pretend-pluralist Britain.

davidaslindsay@hotmail.com, http://davidaslindsay.blogspot.com

steve
29 March 2008 at 16:02

Clearly David, you have no idea how lucky you are compared to others in the world, particularly in Zim. Do you have food on your table? Do you wait 7 hours to buy a loaf of bread? Can you write a comment like yours without being beaten and thrown in prison?

steve
29 March 2008 at 16:04

And I should add...I worked in Zim for 3 years. Heartbreaking. And people like Mbeki could end this in an instant if they had any humanity left in them at all. Blessing to you Rose!

jill richmond
30 March 2008 at 03:05

Lord David Owen must feel so proud when he sees the devastation and hunger in Zimbabwe.

kamphiri05
30 March 2008 at 04:40

I think you people are not being fair to Zimbabwe. You forget that the country gained independence in 1980 and is thus, not a colony. why should you prescribe what is best for Zimbabwe? The country has a developing economy and needs balance of payment from IMF and World Bank, just like any other country, for its economy to tick. If you want to assist, accept the simple fact that Zimbabwe is under sanctions first and also stop interferring in its internal affairs! period. Why should you reduce our country to a toy? You are not the best people to make noise about what you allege is happening in Zimbabwe. Is it not a fact that we were under British misrule for close to a century?

nawawimohamad
30 March 2008 at 10:10

I can't imagine how bad the situation in Zimbabwe is. But having a runway inflation at 100,000 % is just ridiculous. As for those imposing sanctions to Zimbabwe what are they trying to achieve?Any how, the leaders in Zimbabwe must unite to improve the economy and not indulge in political squablings. What is so great about becoming a President of a poor, weak and starving country? What is the point of becoming poor billionaires?

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