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20 November 2010 By Reason Wafawarova ELECTIONS in developing countries often face
interference from the outside world, especially from
Western countries as led by the headquarters of the
imperial authority, the United States. Some of these elections are held in friendly client
states to legitimise their rulers and regimes, and a
good example is the recent Afghanistan election, where
it did not matter that Hamid Karzai's supporters
openly cheated by multiple voting, and that Karzai
himself openly admitted that the election was
fraudulent; nevertheless "a victory for the Afghan
people". There is no irony here; fraudulent US-backed
victory is always supposed to be the pride of the
receiving nation, not least because all that comes
from Washington must always be good for the unpeople
of this world. Other elections are in disfavoured or enemy
countries and these are often used to discredit the
political systems of these unwanted countries. The elections held in Zimbabwe since 2000 are
widely discredited in the West, not because they are
any much different to elections held in other African
countries over the same period. Rather they are discredited because Zimbabwe is
considered to pose "an unusual and extraordinary
threat to the foreign policy of the United States", a
description for which countries like Nicaragua, Chile,
Iraq and others have in the past been severely
punished. Morgan Tsvangirai is calling for a Zimbabwe
election that is extensively sponsored and managed by
Western countries, or, as he describes them, "the
international community". If Tsvangirai had his way in Zimbabwe, (something
absolutely unlikely given the revolutionary resolve of
the nationalist Zanu-PF), the sponsorship and
management of elections by the US in a foreign country
would not be a first at all, but would happen in
Zimbabwe all the same. In 1966, the Dominican Republic had US-sponsored
and organised elections and these were called
"demonstration elections". These are basically elections held in client
states, defined as elections whose primary function is
to convince the home population that the intervention
of the United States is well-intentioned, even that
the populace of the invaded and occupied countries
welcome the intrusion and that they are being given a
democratic choice. One can read George W. Bush's memoirs to see how he
holds that the greater vision of "democratising" Iraq
far outweighs the blatant lies on whose basis the
country was invaded and wrecked to the ground. In fact the "democratisation" far outweighs more
than a million lives that were taken away by the mere
presence of Western occupiers in Iraq. The United States had other demonstration elections
in El Salvador in 1982 and in 1984, just like they had
in Guatemala in 1984/85. These elections were used to enhance an image of
democracy as preached by Washington. By contrast, Nicaragua had an election funded and
organised by the Sandinistas, a government that the
Reagan administration wanted to destabilise and
overthrow. Understandably, the United States went to
unbelievable pains to cast the Nicaraguan election in
bad light. It is like a Mugabe-called election in Zimbabwe.
That election will be funded and organised by the
Zimbabwean Government and its conduct will have
absolutely nothing to do with Tsvangirai's wish for a
Western-sponsored and organised election. Naturally, such an election is cast in very bad
light way before it is even held. That is quite understandable when one looks at it
from the view that says the US must lead all others.
In fact, President Mugabe cannot call for a
democratic election in Zimbabwe for as long as the
West and the MDC-T are not ready for such a call. It is a matter of how "democracy" is defined in the
Western lexicon. The Western propaganda model will always ensure
that the favoured elections will legitimise the
Western sponsored outcome, no matter what the facts
are. The disfavoured election will always be found to be
deficient, farcical, and always failing to legitimise
again, irrespective of the facts at hand. To this end a headline reading "Mugabe wants an
election in 2011" is read to imply a dictatorship as
reported by the likes of the BBC. If the headline read "Tsvangirai wants an election
in 2011" then such a call would be viewed as not only
legitimate but highly democratic regardless of the
fact that it is Mugabe who is constitutionally
mandated to call for elections in Zimbabwe, and not
Tsvangirai, a mere Superintendent Minister in Robert
Mugabe's Government. This is why Tsvangirai believes that his decision
not to participate in elections is good enough to make
an election illegitimate. He knows that regardless of the facts around that
election, his Western backers will always discredit
that election as illegitimate. He cherishes highly the prospect of another round
of murderous illegal sanctions to push this cause. The Salvadoran and Guatemalan elections of 1982 and
1984/85 were held under conditions of severe, ongoing
and systematic state terror against the civilian
population, just like the 2009 Afghan elections. The Nicaragua 1984 election was a people driven
popular process that had people expressing their will
freely and independently. It was important for the Western media to find a
standard by which they would legitimise the Salvadoran
and Guatemalan elections while they made the
Nicaraguan election a farce. The first step was to avoid discussing the
Salvadoran and Guatemalan state terror and other basic
electoral conditions in those elections. This is precisely why the numerous undemocratic and
even criminal activities within the MDC-T are never
reported in Western media. That is against the enhancement of the image of
democracy that the West so wants to create through the
pliant client party competing for political space in
Zimbabwe. The Australian, a high level publication in
Australia, was the only paper to pick up the story of
the MDC-T appointed Ambassador Jacqueline Zwambila
stripping in rage before three male staffers at the
Zimbabwe Embassy in Canberra last week. The paper said "we are baffled" but pointed out
that the more appropriate description for the act
would have been that she "disrobed to her
undergarments". The democracy propaganda model adopted by the West
is based on a traditional election propaganda
framework. The United States employs a number of devices in
its sponsored elections so as to put them in
favourable light. There are always issues that the US wants stressed
and those other issues they want ignored or
downplayed. About the rest of the West is just compliant to
this tradition, if with little dramas from interesting
countries like France and the Scandinavian region. The common strategy is the manipulation of symbols
and agenda so as to create a positive image to a
favoured election. Favoured elections are always
associated with the happy word "democracy" and this is
why that word is exclusively associated with the
puppet MDC-T party in Zimbabwe. An election where the MDC-T does not participate,
loses or complains cannot be democratic regardless
of the facts. This is besides the point that it is the MDC-T's
democratic right not to take part in an election, if
they so feel. It is seen as a form of moral triumph that Morgan
Tsvangirai agrees to participate in an election, and
this is why all Zimbabweans are supposed to put up
with his politics of boycotts and flip flops. The man practices his folly within the propaganda
framework of the West, and he pays no price for
whatever manner of baseness he may portray, or so he
believes. Tsvangirai calls for a people driven constitution
and Zimbabwe produces one. The man realises that the
produced constitution is a wild departure from the
interests of his Western backers, and suddenly the
whole process is labelled illegitimate and fraudulent.
He even openly says he would overrule the people on
this matter as soon his party gets a chance to rule
the country regardless of the outcome of the
referendum. Robert Mugabe says there will be an election in
Zimbabwe because the legally agreed time for such an
election is ripe and his call is vilified as
undemocratic. Tsvangirai's kicking and screaming
against such an election are hailed as the democratic
voice. The only reason for this is Tsvangirai feels he is
not ready for an election, basically because his party
is in disarray by way of a dismantling political
infrastructure and an overindulging team unabatedly
enjoying power privileges in the inclusive Government.
The newly appointed ministers in the inclusive
Government will simply not allow an election to spoil
their newly found luxurious lives, and even some from
Zanu-PF are not too impressed with this prospect of a
short-lived stint with luxury and privilege. The Benz
boys won't let go easily. In 2006, the people of Gaza were torturously
punished by the US-Israeli alliance for "voting the
wrong way" in a free and fair election. This was a remarkable show of the people's will,
and the long tortured and downtrodden people of Gaza
chose to break out of the claws of the prison to which
they had been confined by their US-backed captors from
Israel. Gaza is regarded as the biggest prison on this
planet and the world knows who runs it, and the timid
support from Europe for this mega atrocity is probably
the biggest shame in international relations today,
apart from the lapdog support European countries give
to Washington's military invasions. The Bush administration brutally responded to the
democratic victory of Hamas in 2006, and some writers
even blamed this administration for failing to
recognise the incapacity of the unpeople of the Middle
East to correctly appreciate democracy. The outcome was then viewed as a sign of the
primitiveness and backwardness of the Palestinian
people not as a measure of the expression of their
democratic will. If, or when the people of Zimbabwe will vote for
Zanu- PF in 2011, they will equally be labelled
backward and truly undemocratic all because there is
no prospect for a democracy that produces a losing
Tsvangirai in Zimbabwe; from a Western point of view. There are virtually no limits to the soaring
rhetoric about the marvels of free and fair elections
when they are believed to have come out "the right
way." And equally there will always be soaring propaganda
to discredit "unfree and unfair elections" when they
are labelled as such because they are seen as having
produced a "wrong result". Accordingly, the 2008 election in Lebanon was
greeted with hyper euphoria in the West. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman bragged
that he is "a sucker for free and fair elections," so
"it warms my heart to watch" that what happened in the
Lebanon election "was indeed free and fair not like
the pretend election you are about to see in Iran,
where only candidates approved by the Supreme Leader
can run. He added, "a solid majority of all
Lebanese-Muslims, Christians and Druse voted for the
March 14 coalition led by Saad Hariri, to the extent
that anyone came out of this election with the moral
authority to lead the next government, it was the
coalition that wants Lebanon to be run by and for the
Lebanese not for Iran, not for Syria and not for
fighting Israel". Saad Hariri was standing for Barack Obama in this
election, the very way Tsvangirai stands for Britain
in any Zimbabwean election. The free election was credited to George W. Bush
who stood up and pushed out the Syrians out of Lebanon
in 2005, in order to create an environment of "free
and fair elections". Says Friedman, "Mr Bush helped create the space.
Power matters. Mr Obama helped stir the hope. Words
also matter." The euphoria was joined by the likes of Elliot
Abrams who wrote, "The majority of Lebanese have
rejected Hezbollah's claim that it is not a terrorist
group but a national resistance' . . . The Lebanese
had a chance to vote against Hezbollah, and took the
opportunity". The biggest problem with this euphoria is its
incorrectness. It is never reported in the West that
in reality, the Hezbollah-based March 8 coalition won
handily, by approximately the same figure as Obama vs
McCain in November 2008, about 53 percent of the
popular vote, according to Lebanon's Ministry of
Interior. It is like the widely reported view that the MDC-T
of Zimbabwe defeated Zanu-PF by winning one seat ahead
of the later, regardless of the MDC-trailing Zanu-PF
by 3 percentage points in the popular vote. That popular vote is never reported in the West and
when you mention it you are instantly labelled a
propagandist for Zanu-PF. In reality "the majority of Lebanese . . . took the
opportunity" to reject the charges that Friedman and
Abrams repeat uncritically from Washington propaganda.
Equally the majority of Zimbabweans endorsed Zanu-PF
as the most popular party in the 2008 Parliamentary
race and no amount of propaganda from the West can
ever delete that reality. Friedman and Abrams were referring to
representatives in Parliament, the very same way the
MDC-T's lead was based by one parliamentary seat ahead
of Zanu-PF, precisely their 100 seats compared to Zanu-PF's
99 at the time, now 100 after an independent rejoined
the party. These are some of the weaknesses of the
confessional voting systems, where seats granted to
groups of people may be proportionally disadvantageous
to other groups. In Zimbabwe it is the delimitation process that may
award more seats to certain areas than to other areas
of similar populations. In Lebanon's case it was the Shiites region
disadvantaged by a system that sharply reduced the
seats to some of the largest sects, where Hezbollah
and its Amal ally had tremendous support. Any analyst worth the salt cannot miss such a
glaring factor. But these are matters to be buried
when one is looking at promoting Western democracy. Zimbabwe we are one and together we will
overcome. It is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer and can
be contacted on
wafawarova@yahoo.com or reason@rwafawarova. com or
visit
www.rwafawarova.com |