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Internal Disputes Delay Zimbabwe's ZANU-PF Election Campaign
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Rollout
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B62369:2AB91D3

Launch has now been delayed for a week as internal disputes over
candidates continues





Robert MugabePresident Robert Mugabe was scheduled to launch Zanu PF's
2005 parliamentary election campaign Saturday, but the rollout has now
been delayed for a week as internal disputes over its candidates
continues. Political analysts say Zanu PF is mired in its first
serious internal wrangling since independence in 1980.

On February 18, all candidates contesting the March 31 general
election must be confirmed by nomination courts around the country.

Zanu PF's announcement of a delay in launching its campaign, takes it
to just six days before it is legally bound to have its candidates in
place.

The simmering disputes within Zanu PF exploded shortly before its
annual congress in December, when more than half of its district
chairmen were suspended from the party.

They were allegedly considering supporting a veteran Zanu PF
politician, Emmerson Mnangagwa, for vice president and the person most
likely to succeed Mr. Mugabe if and when he retires. Mr. Mugabe chose
a long time loyalist, Joyce Mujuru, the first woman to rise so high in
Zanu PF.

Zanu PF's top leaders have prevented the party's provincial chairs
from running as candidates in the election, even though the state
controlled media report that some claim they have support of the
majority in their areas.

Elliot Manyika, a fiery Zanu PF leader is in charge of Zanu PF's
election for this year's poll. He told state controlled media that
Zanu PF still has to confirm two candidates in the southern
Matabeleland province before the campaign can go ahead.

Matabeleland, a mostly dry and poor part of Zimbabwe has, for decades,
had a difficult relationship with Zanu PF. This is where the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change has considerable support.

In a rare move, the state controlled media reported Thursday's
announcement by the MDC that it will drop its boycott plans anjd take
part in the poll. The state's Herald newspaper even quoted MDC
spokesman Paul Themba.

Out on the streets however, it seems there is little interest in the
election. While most people in the city center would not agree to
speak into a tape recorder, because they said there were too many
policemen around, Sarah, a 37-year-old single mother of three young
children commented she had not taken much notice of politics recently.
She said life was hard and she was more worried about the cost of food
and school fees than with the election.

She said she did not know who would win the poll, but said she did not
expect any change whichever party emerged as the victor.

Independent analyst and pro democracy campaigner, Lovemore Madhuku,
who is also a senior academic at the University of Zimbabwe, said
Thursday the MDC would not win nearly as many seats as it did in 2000,
when it came within three seats of winning a majority in the 120 seat
parliament. The MDC was only nine months old when it fought its first
election. Hundreds of its supporters have been murdered since then and
thousands arrested, according to statistics collected by the Human
Rights Forum, a coalition of non-governmental organizations in
Zimbabwe.

Mr. Madhuku says many MDC structures have been broken, and he doubts
whether there is enough time or freedom of movement or expression for
the MDC to rebuild lost support before the end of March.