MUGABE`S RIGGING MACHINERY EXPOSED!!
Fundamentals of Mugabe’s rigging machinery
TRADITIONALLY, President Robert Mugabe’s electoral
strengths boil down to violence, rigging, fraud, charm and state media bias.
His weaknesses: old age, bad image, corruption and Zanu PF’s internal
divisions. For decades now, this has been standard and universally accepted
reportage. At face value these verdicts make sense for they could indeed be
true if they were not already so. Mugabe is indeed indisputably and proudly
violent; he enjoys an arthritic grip on the state media and to the extent he
has never been criticised, not even once for a straight 33 years.
At 89, his candidature in today’s election
comes across as some detail to a folk tale. More so when considering both his
ogre image and the fact that many within his party privately wish he was long
gone. And yet the sense and depth of these explanations get easily lost when
strengths mutate into weaknesses and vice versa. Corruption and violence, for
example, can pass as both strengths and weaknesses. Voter fraud, which has
played a key role in past elections, could yet again determine this year’s
outcome. And yet it is this corruption characterised by the routine looting and
daily bribery of public officials which feeds the widespread resentment for
Mugabe’s rule.
While violence seems to have the immediate
and obvious benefits of spreading fear and therefore forced devotion, the
opposite has often tended to be the case in Zimbabwe. As recentlyas 2008, the
Murambatsvina (Drive out rubbish) campaign still fresh in their minds, urban
dwellers across the country voted overwhelmingly against Mugabe. Clearly, these
paradoxes- the occasional mutation of strengths into weaknesses and vice versa-
point to an overwhelming system of gargantuan proportions; and what are
accepted as standard explanations to Mugabe’s electoral endurance could just be
details to this system in whose inner workings may lie the answer to that
vexing question: how does Mugabe rig the election?
This system which has worked wonders for
Mugabe and may do so again this week, has got both loyalty and devotion as its
main arteries. To achieve both devotion and loyalty Mugabe, ever an
arch-manipulator, has over the years managed to tie his cohorts and perhaps
everybody’s fate to his and in a way that has fostered a ubiquitous and
inescapable sense of mutual vulnerability making him both the image and
conscience of the party. Corruption and violence, twin vices which form the
nucleus of Zanu PF’s bad image, are ironically Mugabe’s magic wands making him
the sole dispenser of both goodwill and fate. While both vices are officially
said to be frowned upon they are in reality practiced at Mugabe’s discretion
and must always serve his totalitarian project.
And, as this election will show both these
practices can be discontinued or perpetuated at the leader’s whims which
explains why violence seems to have ceased while voter fraud in said to be in
full swing. To be admitted into the patronage system,
one must, on behalf of the master, commit either of the two crimes or both; and
once in and guilty there is no going back. Crimes committed in service to the
system remain un-prosecuted in return for devotion. So the system of cronyism
serves as a facility for membership recruitment and as a mechanism to secure
collective loyalty and an inbuilt disciplinary system. Such is Mugabe’s system
to which even the top army generals have fallen victim. Everybody fears
accounting in the post-Mugabe era. Bring in propaganda this loyalty is
attributed to charm. Notoriety becomes popularity.
Consequently, the whole system becomes
some kind of a political orchestra in which the members may change but not the
conductor. Members may resent one another, as is the case with the Emerson
Mnangagwa and Solomon Mujuru rivalry camps, but not when they must serve the
orchestra. Come election time they must naturally sing in unison and to the
same old symphony- a medley of threats and denunciations. Perhaps nothing best
illustrates this than the fact that among the champions of Mugabe’s survival
are not just arch enemies but some who, according to wikileaks revelations,
pray to see his back. That the conductor of the orchestra is so old and in such
poor health so as to force discord is neither here nor there. Rather, his old
age comes in handy. In Zimbabwe, as elsewhere in Africa, age comes with wisdom
and the older the conductor gets the more loyalty he inspires. Again here we
see a weakness becoming strength.
As can be seen Mugabe’s core strength is
the sophisticated and manipulative totalitarian system- a mosaic of
self-generated and naturally given advantages. So efficient is the system that
even when disaster strikes the orchestra-that massive body of mutually
vulnerable servants will, foul or fair, save him and therefore themselves.
Before, during and after crisis, Mugabe seems secure. As Zimbabwe votes today
and as the whole world remains on tenterhooks the machine might just be at
work.
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