Zimbabwe Elections 2018 - July 30: Ahead of polls opening, the Mugabes' influence is still felt

TTT

All Star
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
2,249
Reputation
460
Daps
5,556
Reppin
NULL
ZANU will lose support from the 66%+ they got in the last elections it appears. Mnangagwa is not as charismatic as Mugabe in the rural areas where they are the strongest. We will see but it might head to a runoff.



Three days after a grenade attack on President Emmerson Mnangagwa – a truly explosive start to the campaign for Zimbabwe’s historic elections – a photograph went viral on social media of Grace Mugabe, flashing a V for victory sign.

Robert Mugabe’s wife was celebrating, her critics claim, the assassination attempt which had come so close to eliminating the man who had replaced her husband in power, and who thwarted her ambition of succeeding him as leader of the country.

The fall of Mr Mugabe last year in a coup, a fascinating drama played out in front of the international media, should have been seen the disappearance of Africa’s longest serving head of state and his wife, pilloried as “Disgrace” or “Gucci Grace” by her many enemies who accuse her of greed and corruption on an industrial scale.

Some even believed that the couple may have experienced the grim end, execution, suffered by Nicolae and Elena Ceausescu in Romania in 1989.

But eight months on from that tumultuous time, the Mugabes are very much around: largely out of sight, but certainly not out of mind.

They are not under arrest and have the leeway to travel in and out of the country. The photo of Grace making the gesture was allegedly taken in Singapore, where her husband had gone for medical treatment.


  • Read more
Zimbabwe’s president survives ‘assassination attempt’ at rally

The Zimbabwean government picked up the bill, part of Mr Mugabe’s agreed healthcare package for leaving the presidency.

The 94-year-old former president and his wife, who is 41 years younger, take their flights from the Robert Mugabe International in Harare. There are no plans to change the name of the airport.

They continue to live at their 25-room mansion, Blue House, as before, where visiting foreign dignitaries have been dropping in to meet Mr Mugabe frequently enough for it to make the news when the Elders, the international group of former public figures led by Kofi Annan, failed to meet the former president and his wife during a visit this month.

There is little doubt that the Mugabes still retain a degree of influence as the country goes to the polls on 30 July: the first to take place in 38 years without Mr Mugabe in power.

In parts of the country, people are holding rallies wearing T-shirts with his picture and carrying banners with his name, and there are calls from loyalists for him to return from his internal political exile.

A new political group, the National Patriotic Front (NPF), was formed in March by Mugabe supporters in the ruling Zanu-PF party with the former president’s backing.

It is now taking part in the campaign, fielding a hundred candidates, and has backed an opposition alliance led by the MDC (Movement for Democratic Change), although talks to formally join did not come to fruition.

The MDC leader Nelson Chamisa, who is running close to Mr Mnangagwa in the opinion polls, was once hospitalised with a fractured skull by security agents of the Mugabe regime.

mugabe.jpg

The Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport in Harare (AP)
He is not, however, averse to receiving support from the unexpected quarter.

While denying claims of getting money from the Mugabes, and stressing that there is no formal agreement with the NPF, he has declared: “We welcome every vote; Mugabe, we welcome your vote. We want a new dispensation, a fresh start.”

Mr Chamisa has also dismissed rumours that Grace Mugabe or other former members of the Mugabe government may be part of an administration if he were to win the election. But there was ambiguity in the denial.

“Whoever wants to join us is welcome, our bus doesn’t get full but there is no way one can join a church and become a deacon the same day,” he told a recent rally.

Some of the Mugabe influence is allegedly violent and dangerous. A group known as “Generation 40” or “G 40”, part of the NPF – who had hitched their stars to Grace’s ascent – have been blamed for the grenade attack in Bulawayo a month ago targeting President Mnangagwa, which killed two people and injured more than 40 others.

No evidence has been produced so far to back the claim made by Mr Mnangagwa and government officials (among others) of an alleged link between “G 40” and the Mugabes. A number of people were arrested after the attack; some have been freed.

There have been raids and detentions, however, of former senior officials close to the Mugabes in other prosecutions.

Those being held include Tadzingaira Tachiveyi, a deputy director of the country’s security agency, Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) who was sacked from his post following Robert Mugabe’s removal.

Read more
A former Mugabe cabinet minister, Samuel Undenge, is now in jail following corruption convictions. The former finance minister, Ignatius Chombo, is currently on trial, also for alleged corruption.

An attempt earlier this month to detain another former minister, Saviour Kasukuwere, failed because he was in South Africa.

The bitter rivalry between Grace Mugabe and Mr Mnangagwa, known as the “Crocodile” for his supposed guile, was one if the key factors behind what happened last November.

His sacking from the government by President Mugabe was widely believed to be at the instigation of Grace, who had declared at one point that the “crocodile has turned into snake and must be hit on the head”.

Mr Mnangagwa fled to South Africa after receiving death threats, with Grace expected to take over his post of vice-president.

But he struck back in conjunction with the head of the army, General Constantino Chiwenga, to carry out the putsch which overthrew the president.

Mr Mugabe refused to go into exile and remains in Zimbabwe under a deal which granted him – and supposedly his wife – immunity from prosecution.

One of the conditions, claim government officials, is that the former president does not get involved in politics. But many of his supporters believe that the time has come for the former president to make his presence felt.

At Mr Mugabe’s hometown of Chinhoyi, 120km northwest of Harare, Solomon Zivai spoke of the anger over the president’s removal.

Mugabe resigns: Zimbabwean Parliament celebrates as decision is announced
“What they did to him was completely illegal, it was against the constitution – that is very clear,” said the 58-year-old, who owns several shops.

“They are keeping him away from politics, but we need him to unify the people, working behind the scenes if necessary.

“Of course he is old, but this is not Europe or America, here we believe that old people have wisdom which should not be wasted, especially someone like him who sacrificed so much to get us our independence.”

Zanu-PF held a rally recently with Mr Mnangagwa at Chinhoyi. The president was careful not to criticise Mr Mugabe directly, as he has throughout the campaign.

But the view of Truelove Kudakwashe, a lifelong Zanu-PF supporter, and his companions was: “The crocodile is not wanted here, he had worked with Robert Mugabe and then turned against him.

“Mnangagwa says he is improving the economy by getting in foreign investments, but is doing nothing for the ordinary people of Zimbabwe. I would not vote for Zanu-PF this time. I would have voted for Robert Mugabe.

“As for Grace, I was not a supporter, but she had good backing from some in the party, you cannot deny that. Most of all, you cannot just get rid of someone like Robert Mugabe so easily.

As polls are about to open in Zimbabwe's elections, the Mugabes' influence is still felt
 

TTT

All Star
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
2,249
Reputation
460
Daps
5,556
Reppin
NULL
Mugabe announces he won't vote for his party ZANU-PF. Old man says he hasn't received his pension of $467 000. Government swiftly removed any security from his home according to reports
 

thatrapsfan

Superstar
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
17,609
Reputation
1,833
Daps
53,519
Reppin
NULL
Theyve only announced a few rural results so far and ZANU-PF won 6 out of 7 seats. Didnt announce any of the urban results :francis: probably deliberate to set the stage for an MDC loss.


@TTT are the votes for President and the legislature seperate?
 

98Ntu

Peace ✌🏿
Joined
Jul 2, 2018
Messages
2,586
Reputation
2,240
Daps
18,338
Even if Chamisa wins, he probably won’t get to be president. Mnangagwa is vicious sociopath who will find power somehow. He and the ZANU circle jerk who’ve ran Zim wont let go. The ZANU machine is in too deep and most Zimbabweans won’t fight back. As a Zimbabwean, I’m accepting the fact that Zim May never recover unless their is extreme violence or foreign intervention :snoop:
 

TTT

All Star
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
2,249
Reputation
460
Daps
5,556
Reppin
NULL
Theyve only announced a few rural results so far and ZANU-PF won 6 out of 7 seats. Didnt announce any of the urban results :francis: probably deliberate to set the stage for an MDC loss.


@TTT are the votes for President and the legislature seperate?
They are not. I read that they will announce Presidential after all the provinces are in, it might just be a total vote which would be a repeat of 08
 

thatrapsfan

Superstar
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
17,609
Reputation
1,833
Daps
53,519
Reppin
NULL
Even if Chamisa wins, he probably won’t get to be president. Mnangagwa is vicious sociopath who will find power somehow. He and the ZANU circle jerk who’ve ran Zim wont let go. The ZANU machine is in too deep and most Zimbabweans won’t fight back. As a Zimbabwean, I’m accepting the fact that Zim May never recover unless their is extreme violence or foreign intervention :snoop:
:damn: Thats depressing breh. Zimbos always struck me as very nice and open people when Ive come across them. How popular is the MDC and Chamisa right now in your view?
 

98Ntu

Peace ✌🏿
Joined
Jul 2, 2018
Messages
2,586
Reputation
2,240
Daps
18,338
:damn: Thats depressing breh. Zimbos always struck me as very nice and open people when Ive come across them. How popular is the MDC and Chamisa right now in your view?

The youth, eduatced and the urban communities love them. Chamisa will win, but he probably won’t be president. Smh. I wanna cry sometimes breh lol
 

TTT

All Star
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
2,249
Reputation
460
Daps
5,556
Reppin
NULL
Yeah just like 08 and early 2000s elections. The military is always the default response.Only the 2013 elections in recent times have been peaceful
 

ROLLTIDE4EVER

Rookie
Joined
Dec 15, 2016
Messages
175
Reputation
-215
Daps
132
Don't Zimbabwe have a 2nd amendment of sorts. Y'know a right to bear arms (if you can afford it).
 
Top