Skip Navigation

January Vol 29, Featured Articles, Parliament and Politics

2011 elections in Zambia and Zimbabwe could be bloody

By Afrik.com   Mon, Jan 03, 2011

The 2011 elections in Zambia have been predicted to become the bloodiest ever if the government does not put in place measures to stop violence, Colonel Panji Kaunda has warned. But in neighboring Zimbabwe, polls could be postponed to pave way for the completion of constitutional reforms.

The 2011 elections in Zambia have been predicted to become the bloodiest ever if the government does not put in place measures to stop violence, Colonel Panji Kaunda has warned. But in neighboring Zimbabwe, polls could be postponed to pave way for the completion of constitutional reforms.

Zambia is due for presidential elections with the incumbent Rupiah Banda running for his first full term as President after replacing Levy Mwanawasa, who died in August 2008 in a military hospital in France after suffering a stroke while attending an African Union (AU) summit in Egypt.

Although dates for the polls have not yet been announced, a bloody election due to a recent spate of politically motivated violence has been evoked.

“If government will not stop this violence, 2011 elections will be the bloodiest ever. We are going to lose lives, we are going to get massacred, and, in the end, this country will be destroyed as we have seen in other countries,” Col. Panji is quoted as saying on Monday.

“The onus of stopping violence is on the government. Few months ago, we had some cadres threatening to gang-rape Honourable Edith Nawakwi; nothing happened. We had cadres threatening to manhandle Bishop Duffy in Mongu; nothing happened.

"We had some cadres who even threatened to take the life of their own part,y former vice-president Enoch Kavindele; nothing happened.”

He said the government was condoning violence being perpetuated by the MMD cadres, for which some cadres should have been in jail by now.

But that country’s Independent Churches of Zambia (ICOZ) has said Zambians should not make the mistake of voting for wrong leaders and has since advised that Banda should be given another term if economic development is to be sustained.

ICOZ president David Masupa is quoted saying that Zambians should critically analyze the people who are offering themselves for leadership.

“As we enter into 2011, first of all, we would like to commend the Zambian people for their peace and maturity last year. Despite the small pockets of violence in Mufumbwe and Chifubu, the country was generally peaceful.

“This year being an election year, we would like Zambians to be reflective in choosing credible leaders. Zambians must ask themselves as to what they really want which the MMD hasn’t done,” he said.

Zimbabwe

In Zimbabwe, President Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party seemed to be pushing ahead with early elections this year, but recent statements from his party now suggest otherwise.

The Sunday Mail newspaper, which is tightly controlled by ZANU-PF officials at the weekend, said it was "not feasible to hold elections in the first half of 2011.”

Said the publication, "Sources yesterday (Saturday) said it was highly unlikely that the polls will be held before June, as the crafting of the new supreme law looks certain to spill into the second half of the year."

President Robert Mugabe, who turns 87 in the month of February, says he is fed up with sharing power with his decade-long rival, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Despite the formation of a unity government in February of last year, President Mugabe’s loyalists remain in charge of the security forces.

In November last year, Zimbabwe’s police chief caused a storm when he warned that results of next year’s elections will be accepted only if the octogenarian ruler’s party wins.

“It’s a going to be a no-holds-barred election,” said Iden Wetherell, an AMH group senior associate editor and member of the Zimbabwe National Editor’s Forum.

He warned that Mr. Mugabe’s sympathisers were prepared to kill to ensure that the veteran ruler in power since Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980 wins the crucial vote.

Critics say that rushed polls without political reforms, including a new constitution guaranteeing basic rights, would only favor Mugabe and ZANU-PF, who have held power since independence from Britain in 1980.

By Afrik.com

Please login to post your comments.

More Featured Articles

CAUGHT CHEATING? HOW TO MOVE FORWARD AFTER BEING UNFAITHFUL

We all learn to look out for signs that our man is cheating, or subtle hints that he might be seeing someone else on the side, but what if you are the one that cheated? Assuming that you still want to work on your current relationship, we have 7 ways to move on successfully after you’ve been unfaithful. This is not a “loop-hole” and is not praised, but the reality is 14 percent of married women have had affairs at least once during their married lives and 17 percent of divorces in the United States are caused by infidelity. If you fall into this category, and don’t want to be part of the divorce statistic, take a look at these helpful steps.

Sure signs she's cheating on you

MARRIAGES often break down on account of husbands not being loyal to their wives.

Who wants to be a monkey?

A student has been left feeling a little red-faced after an embarrassing incident with a monkey made her a global star. Charmian Chen, who just happens to be a model, was visiting the Sacred Monkey Forest Ubud in Bali last month when two of the primates decided she was a little overdressed.The 22-year-old student, from Taiwan, was on holiday on the tropical Indonesian island feeding long-tailed macaques when she was singled out.

Dinizulu Mbikokayise Macaphulana:Drowning Mugabe hugging waves

IF THE evil that Robert Mugabe has visited upon Zimbabweans was a light matter, the very desperate attempts by his hired pundits and aspiring spin doctors to restore him to national popularity would have been entertaining.

Aviation meltdown

Shock decline in nation's air industry due to mismanagement, corruption and incompetence

Investigation into death of Notorious B.I.G. heats up

Los Angeles (CNN) -- A task force made up of local and federal law enforcement agencies is actively pursuing leads into the 1997 slaying of hip hop artist Christopher Wallace, better known as Biggie Smalls or Notorious B.I.G., according to two sources familiar with the investigation.

Clifford Chitupa Mashiri: Why people must reject Robert Mugabe’s Kariba Draft Constitution

One of the reasons why Zimbabwe needs a new constitution is because unlike the US Constitution which has been amended only 27 times since 1776, Zimbabwe’s Lancaster House Constitution has been amended some 19 times since 1980.

Ben T. Semwayo :"Zimbabwe Opposition Unite"

OPINION - It undoubtedly came as a nerve-jangling shock to the suffering Zimbabweans to learn that five politicians will be locking horns in the quest to become Zimbabwe’s next leader. For too long they have had to endure the agony of seeing their hope of emancipation from the ruling gang of rabid thugs dashed.

Obama to increase engagement with Africa in 2011

President Barack Obama is quietly but strategically stepping up his outreach to Africa, using this year to increase his engagement with a continent that is personally meaningful to him and important to U.S. interests.

African Union: Will Ivory Coast, Kenya and Zimbabwe Provide Lessons On Handling Politics Democratically?

ZIMBABWE – HARARE – An attempt to replace people power with bureaucratic power typifies the Kenya and Zimbabwe political agreements that grew from diplomatic brokerage aided by external expertise of African personalities eminently regarded internationally.

Weird:Therapist to marry herself

A Taiwan therapist plans a new start in the New Year by holding a splendid wedding. What is unusual about her plan is that there will be no groom, the TVBS cable news channel reported.

Christopher R. Albon :How WikiLeaks Just Set Back Democracy in Zimbabwe

Christopher R. Albon is a political science Ph.D candidate at U.C. Davis specializing in the relationship between armed conflict and public health. He writes at Conflict Health, Current Intelligence, and the U.S. Naval Institute blog.

Moses Chamboko :ZANU PF’s pre-election rhetoric is treasonous

Allow me to start by borrowing description of an act of treason from www.wisegeek.com: “A major act of treason would be an activity that is designed to lead directly to overthrow of a government or carrying out a threat to a major state figure such as a member of the royal family or a President....”

JASON MOYO: It's time to lick Robert Mugabe's ********* again

At the end of the fawn-fest that is the Zanu-PF annual conference, Zimbabweans will know when they will again be dragged into an election campaign.

Mondli Makhanya:Zimbabwe will test the resolve shown after Ivory Coast's poll

In January 2000, Brussels-based diplomats returned to the Belgian capital and European Union seat of power after the Christmas break.

Grace Mugabe's lawsuit plot to blackmail Trevor Ncube - Sources

HARARE – President Mugabe is using his wife to launched a defamation lawsuit against a private Sunday newspaper as plot to blackmail South African based Zimbabwean publisher Trevor Ncube whose South African newspaper won the right to publish highly incriminating 2002 election report marred by violence and widespread vote rigging, The Zimbabwe Mail can reveal.

Edward Jones:Mugabe election call spoils the party

HARARE – The arrival of dusk illuminates the park in central Harare, glowing with lights and decorations that mark the arrival of Christmas, radiating the mood in this southern African country that had dimmed in the last decade as its citizens grappled with an economic and political crisis.