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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
Next
step for MDC
Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Zimbabwe
Elections, No. 26 Part 2, April 06, 2005
By *Marceline Ndoro in Harare
April 06,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_026_3_eng.txt
Opposition party
says it intends to use its seats in parliament to expose government "nonsense".
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change, MDC, will take up the 41 parliamentary seats it
won in the country's recent elections, in spite of its protests that the
vote was rigged.
In an interview with
IWPR, MDC secretary-general Welshman Ncube said his party rejects its
overall defeat in the election, which he said was "engineered by widespread
fraud".
But the MDC's successful
MPs, elected mainly in urban areas, won their seats fair and square, he
said, and the party would build on these successes to publicise what he
described as the ZANU PF government's corruption, mismanagement and misrule.
"We intend to use
the seats in parliament to expose government nonsense... in whatever way
possible," said Ncube, who himself won the Bulawayo East constituency
for the MDC.
He said the MDC would
not appeal to Zimbabwe's courts as the main way of challenging the results,
but would intensify its protests in other ways. He declined to expand
on how this might be done but promised that the strategy would soon become
clear.
In the wake of parliamentary
elections in 2000 in which the MDC won 57 seats, the party contested ZANU
PF victories in a further 30 seats. The appeals are still stuck in the
supreme court, which President Robert Mugabe has packed with judges personally
loyal to him and the ruling party.
Immediately after
the results of the latest parliamentary election were announced on April
2, MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai urged people to "defend their vote", which
he said could include some form of mass action.
But Ncube said the
party's resort to Zimbabwe's judiciary would be more limited this time
round.
"We are going to go
to the courts to challenge certain selected glaring [results]," he told
IWPR. "Our lawyers are currently working on the papers. Unlike in 2000,
when we challenged almost all of the seats we lost, this time we are selecting
just a few and these will be enough to expose Zanu PF's rigging."
Constituencies likely
to be challenged are Manyame and Mhondoro in Mashonaland West; Harare
South, Goromonzi and Marondera East in Mashonaland East; and Chivi North
in Masvingo, whose final declared results did not tally with the numbers
of voters counted at polling stations.
In Manyame, for example,
President Mugabe's nephew Patrick Zhuwao reportedly received 15,448 votes,
beating the MDC candidate Suka Hilda Mafudze who apparently secured just
8,312. But the combined total of these results suggests 23,760 people
voted in the constituency, nearly 10,000 more than the actual figure announced
as having completed ballots at the polling stations.
A senior MDC official
said the party might now push for full international sanctions against
Zimbabwe as opposed to the targeted sanctions on senior government and
party officials currently enforced mainly by the European Union, United
States, Canada and Australia.
The official declined
to be named - calling for sanctions against Zimbabwe might be counted
as treason, an offence punishable by hanging.
*Marceline Ndoro
is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Harare.
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