By Farai Sevenzo
The electoral playing field had become so one-sided, the incidents of violence and murder against his supporters so widespread, that Morgan Tsvangirai had to do something.
On Sunday afternoon he called a press conference in his Strathaven home in Harare’s central suburbs and announced that his party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), was pulling out of the presidential run-off scheduled for Friday, 27 June.
Whole constituencies comfortably won in the 29 March poll were being overrun by Zanu-PF’s youth militias. Mob rule reigned even in the townships.
Those affiliated with the opposition – elected MPs, councillors, organising secretaries, activists – were being systematically targeted.
One youth was dragged out of his councillor relative’s home in Chitungwiza, a satellite town south of Harare, and the axe used to break down their door was embedded in his skull. An opposition mayor had his young wife kidnapped and murdered.
It was against this background that Sunday promised something dramatic from the opposition.
Despite their Secretary General, Tendai Biti, appearing in leg irons at the high court last Friday, MDC supporters were hoping that one rally in Harare, which the authorities had granted permission for through the High Court, would go ahead.
But it was not to be.
The ruling party headquarters was filled with militant youth spoiling for a fight and the location for the rally, a wide open space nearby, behind what used to be the Sheraton Hotel, was filled with police officers in riot gear.
For just under an hour, tear gas fired by police drifted along Samora Machel Avenue, and passing cars were stoned. A text started doing the rounds from around 1200 GMT: “Avoid Samora Machel and Borrowdale road big riot underway police with teargas army zanu thugs stoning cars mdc uprising at rally.”
The MDC says three-quarters of the country is no longer accessible to its election agents and campaigners, “war veterans” having set up bases and roadblocks which make it impossible for anyone from the opposition to move freely.
“Zanu-PF has no respect for SADC (Southern Africa Development Community), for the AU (African Union), for the UN, for anybody,” said one party official.
Tineyi Munetsi, MDC organising secretary for Chitungwiza, rang me from Mr Tsvangirai’s house and I asked him what he thought of the decision to pull out.
“I believe it is the right decision,” he answered. “For the last week it was my task to organise polling agents for the rural constituencies, and they are all being targeted.
“There is not a single area we can campaign in, even the townships are closed. And think of how many of our people have been murdered. This is not an election, this is a war, and we will not legitimise it by taking part in what is a farce.”
“Look here, people are being told that after they vote they have to write down the serial numbers of their ballot papers so the fake election monitors can cross-reference them to who they voted for.”
“You’re not serious, why did he do that?” said a woman selling fruit in the winter sun.