"I am an old man and have known a great many troubles, but most of them never happened." and so said Mark Twain many years ago.
This is so true in Zimbabwe where, nearly every analyst is anticipating and actually talking up violence before the next elections, while those outside our borders are anticipating a peaceful election. Isn't it sad that, most Zimbabweans I have spoken to, because of their past experience, expect the future to be the same? "Zimbabweans paralyzed with fear" so read the headlines recently. Nothing can be further from the truth.
It is so awful that, even when President Mugabe stands up and a podium and talks peace, nobody wants to believe him because of the past. Okay, I do agree that it doesn't help when, soon after that, one of his minions stands up and talks about how ZANU (PF) will never allow anyone else besides our erstwhile freedom fighters to be President. This, of course, continues to fuel high expectations of a violent election and so everyone gets their pens out and writes about how violent things are going to be. The cycle continues. If and when the violence actually happens, everyone says "you see, we told you so" and life goes on. How miserable.
I think that our mantra should rather be "no elections without reforms" and all of us, progressive Zimbabweans, should shout out loud about how the lack of reforms, as anticipated in the Global Political Agreement (GPA), is intolerable and must be in place before we go to vote. Pity we can't all abstain from voting in protest because if we did, guess who would win by a landslide majority by merely busing a few hundred policemen to a polling station to vote?
Now just imagine that you had to participate in an election where, your competitor has exclusive access to the media, controls the police and calls the shots on who gets to administer the process of elections. That is exactly where we are now. Unless media reforms are in place, the police army and all the despicable minions of the incumbent are excluded from the electoral process and we might as well forget about change in Zimbabwe.
Added to that, are the unconfirmed rumors that the ANC of South Africa is assisting ZANU (PF) and advising them to use a strategy of creating exaggerated anticipations! For goodness sake that is not new, for the last 33 years we have had exaggerated anticipations and exaggerated "enemies of the state" out there ; these being those Zimbabweans that challenged the status quo.