Hardline war veterans want presidential run-off aborted


HARARE - A new group of hardline supporters of President Robert Mugabe - whose patron is his wife, Grace - is urging the government to abort the electoral process and instead reconstitute the old parliament dominated by the ruling ZANU PF party and let the veteran leader keep his job.

The group of former fighters of Zimbabwe’s 1970s war of independence said it wanted the June 27 second round presidential election shelved until Western countries lifted sanctions against Mugabe’s government, which the group said have hurt the economy and turned voters against the Harare administration.

The group, calling itself the Revolutionary Council and led by war veteran Chris Pasipamire, said its major objective was to defend Mugabe’s controversial land reforms that saw white farmers expelled and their farms handed over to blacks, most of them supporters or top officials of ZANU PF.

As the Revolutionary Council we hereby demand that the whole electoral process be set aside and the old parliament be re-constituted with President Mugabe remaining the head of state, said the group that announced its arrival on Zimbabwe’s political scene late on Wednesday night.

No run-off (election) will be held until the sanctions are lifted . . . elections are not a priority now as they serve no purpose except regime change, the war veterans group said.

War veterans are key allies of Mugabe who he often uses as shock troops to intimidate political opponents.

While Pasipamire said Grace was the patron of the Revolutionary Council, Mugabe’s wife was not immediately available to confirm her role in the organisation or whether she subscribed to its call to abort the electoral process.

But Grace last week told ZANU PF supporters that her husband would never handover power to opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party leader Moragn Tsvangirai even if he were to win the second round presidential election later this month.

Grace – 40 years junior to the 84-year old Mugabe and known for her love for shopping – said her husband would give up power only to someone from his ZANU PF party.

The run-off election is being held because Tsvangirai defeated Mugabe in a March 29 poll but failed to garner more than 50 percent of the vote needed to take power under the country’s electoral laws.

Tsvangirai, who polled 47.8 percent of the vote in March against Mugabe’s 43.2 percent starts as favourite to win the run-off election. However, analysts say political violence that has to date killed at least 60 MDC supporters and displaced thousands others might just tilt the scales in favour of Mugabe.

Meanwhile MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa on Thursday dismissed the Revolutionary Council as a ZANUPF-sponsored group out to sow confusion ahead of the run-off poll.

Chamisa said: The run-off is a legal requirement . . . we don’t care a jot about a ZANU PF-sponsored organisation afraid that Mugabe’s time is up. – ZimOnline.

Post published in: News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *