Reference Text
Time Left10:00
His
victory
as
President
in
this
week's
general
election
confers
popular
legitimacy
on
Emmerson
Mnangagwa,
Zimbabwe's
military-installed
leader
since
November
2017.
The
two-thirds
majority
for
the
ruling
Zanu-PF
party
in
Parliament
will
tighten
its
control
over
state
institutions.
There
had
been
palpable
relief
in
Harare
when
the
37-year-long
dictatorship
of
the
veteran
liberation
leader
Robert
Mugabe
was
brought
to
an
end
in
a
soft
coup
last
year.
But
the
euphoria
soon
gave
way
to
speculation
over
the
substance
of
the
military-inspired
transition.
Mr.
Mnangagwa,
after
all,
had
been
Vice-President
under
Mr.
Mugabe,
before
being
sacked
by
his
political
mentor.
Now,
General
Constantino
Chiwenga,
who
was
instrumental
in
Mr.
Mnangagwa's
return
from
a
brief
exile,
is
his
Vice-President,
and
the
army
top
brass
wields
influence
over
the
government.
But
the
75-year-old
President
has
in
recent
months
sought
to
project
himself
as
a
political
reformist
and
an
economic
liberal.
His
invitation
to
international
observers
to
monitor
the
polls
was
in
sharp
contrast
to
the
conduct
of
previous
elections.
Zimbabwe's
return
to
the
Commonwealth
and
re-engagement
with
multilateral
institutions
are
his
priorities.
The
realisation
of
these
aspirations
hinges
on
the
conduct
of
free
and
fair
elections
and
the
restoration
of
the
rule
of
law.
The
international
community
has
been
watching
for
cues
on
where
Zimbabwe
is
headed
in
terms
of
restoring
the
rule
of
law
after
the
excesses
of
the
Mugabe
years.
Closer
to
the
elections,
there
had
been
concerns
that
the
process
of
voter
registration
was
not
transparent,
especially
in
the
Zanu-PF's
rural
strongholds.
But
there
was
acknowledgment
of
a
more
open
political
climate,
compared
to
the
large-scale
violence
following
the
2008
elections.
This
was
confirmed
by
a
high
turnout,
and
the
voting
was
largely
incident-free.
But
the
bloody
violence
witnessed
since
the
start
of
counting,
which
has
been
blamed
on
the
military,
has
drawn
justified
global
condemnation.
The
opposition
too
is
not
blameless.
Nelson
Chamisa,
leader
of
the
Movement
for
Democratic
Change,
recklessly
claimed
the
party
was
in
the
lead
even
before
the
election
commission
announced
results.
The
elections
show
that
the
change
Zimbabweans
yearn
for
is
painfully
slow
to
be
realised.
The
country
needs
to
build
on
the
sliver
of
hope
that
this
election
has
afforded
for
lasting
stability.
Zimbabwe
has
been
without
a
currency
for
nearly
a
decade
and
the
bond
notes
used
as
a
proxy
for
the
dollar
fetch
less
than
their
face
value
in
the
market.
It
needs
to
attract
investment,
promote
industrialisation
and
foster
employment
generation.
Mr.
Mnangagwa
must
convert
his
business-friendly
rhetoric
into
action.
His
victory
as
President
in
this
week's
general
election
confers
popular
legitimacy
on
Emmerson
Mnangagwa,
Zimbabwe's
military-installed
leader
since
November
2017.
The
two-thirds
majority
for
the
ruling
Zanu-PF
party
in
Parliament