PRETORIA, South Africa _ Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai said Saturday that he will return to his homeland
despite threats to his life to take part in a runoff against
President Robert Mugabe.
Tsvangirai, addressing reporters in the capital of neighboring
South Africa, said his supporters would feel "betrayed"
if he did not face Zimbabwe's ruler of 28 years.
"A runoff election could finally knock out the dictator for
good," Tsvangirai said. "I am ready and the people are
ready for the final round."
No runoff date has been set. Tsvangirai said Saturday it should
be held within 21 days of the May 2 announcement of presidential
results, but Zimbabwean government officials have said the
electoral commission has up to a year to hold the vote.
Tsvangirai said he will return shortly to Zimbabwe and intends
to "begin a victory tour." He maintains he won the first
round outright and that official figures showing a second round was
necessary were fraudulent.
Opposition officials and independent human rights activists have
accused Mugabe of orchestrating violence against the opposition
since the first round on March 29. Tsvangirai and other top
opposition figures have stayed out of Zimbabwe since the initial
voting.
Tsvangirai left soon after the news conference for a meeting in
Luanda with President Jose Eduardo dos Santos of Angola, who heads
the Southern African Development Community election observer
mission.
Observers inside and outside Zimbabwe have questioned whether a
second round of voting could be free and fair with the opposition
unable to campaign freely because of attacks and threats.
Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF, meanwhile, already has launched its
runoff campaign.
Tapiwa Mudiwa, a 26-year-old supporter of Tsvangirai's
Movement for Democratic Change, was skeptical Saturday.
"How are we going to campaign in the runoff as MDC
supporters?" Mudiwa said in Harare, the Zimbabwean capital.
"We can't wear MDC T-shirts. We fear we can't even go
for rallies. Cars are being burned."
Tsvangirai acknowledged the risks and said another election
"may bring more violence." But consultations with a wide
range of Zimbabweans had convinced him they wanted him to run.
"They believe that we as a nation are brave enough, we are
strong enough and we are angry enough to fight an election once
again," he said. "We believe our people would feel
betrayed if we shied away from the final knock out."
The Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights has said 22
people have died and 900 tortured in postelection violence, while
40,000 farmworkers have been displaced in an effort to prevent them
from voting in the run-off.
Tsvangirai said the violence, intended to "decimate"
his party's election machinery, had had "some effect"
but not disabled it. "We are going to ensure that we make the
necessary preparations to overcome those obstacles," he
said.
He called for SADC to ensure the runoff was held free of
violence and monitored by regional peacekeepers, with unfettered
access for international observers and journalists, many of whom
were barred during the first round. He also said a new electoral
commission should be established for the vote. These are "the
optimum conditions" under which the runoff should be held.
"But we have stated that we are going to run," he said
at the news conference, which also was attended by other top
officials of his party.
Tsvangirai acknowledged some in Zimbabwe may have felt he had
abandoned them. There have been persistent rumors he had gone into
exile, though he has maintained he was traveling only to rally
international support for democracy in Zimbabwe and always planned
to return.
Fisher Murambatsvina, a 28-year-old MDC activist, said it was
risky for Tsvangirai to return.
Tsvangirai, a former trade union leader, has survived three
assassination attempts, including a 1997 attempt by unidentified
assailants to throw him from a 10th floor window. Last year, he was
hospitalized after a brutal assault by police at a prayer rally,
and images seen around the world of his bruised and swollen face
have come to symbolize the challenge dissenters face in his
homeland.
"They beat him up before and this may happen again, just to
break him down," Murambatsvina said Saturday in Harare.
"It's risky for Morgan Tsvangirai to come back. The army
is in charge. Right now, I don't think he will be safe if he is
coming to start his campaign."
Mugabe, 84, has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980 and
once was hailed for promoting racial reconciliation and bringing
education and health care to the black majority. But in recent
years he has been accused of holding onto power through elections
that independent observers say were marred by fraud, intimidation
and rigging, and of overseeing his country's economic
collapse.
"Mugabe was once my hero, too," Tsvangirai said
Saturday. "It is very, very sad for me to call Mugabe a former
liberator. It is sad for me to say that he has turned his back on
both his people and his continent."
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