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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


  • MDC to challenge poll in court, perhaps on streets
    Jonathan Katzenellenbogen, Business Day
    April 13, 2005

    http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/zimbabwe.aspx?ID=BD4A35912

    AS THE main opposition party in Zimbabwe, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), took up its 41 seats in parliament yesterday, it detailed its allegations of a stolen election in what it hinted may be a prelude to a call for mass action.

    MDC spokesman Paul Themba Nyathi said in Johannesburg yesterday that while the party was taking up its seats in parliament, it would consider pursuing a range actions within the framework of Zimbabwe’s constitution.

    The MDC has yet to have one of its cases contesting previous elections heard, but legal spokesman David Coltart said it would soon launch court challenges against a result for a constituency in each province, to show "the systematic nature of the fraud".

    Pointing to a series of "unexplained discrepancies" in the results, Coltart said he was disturbed that SA’s official observer mission and that from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) had not responded to the allegations.

    A nearly 60-page MDC report includes letters outlining complaints of electoral malpractice to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission and the state-owned broadcaster, for what it alleged was unfair treatment of the party.

    The allegations include: denial of access to polling stations for MDC elections agents; about 10% of voters (133155) were turned away in six of 10 provinces; and counting started late, creating a gap for manipulation.

    Yesterday the MDC called for the commission to release immediately the voters’ roll in electronic form, polling station returns and an independent results audit.

    The MDC claims that it was denied access to the data before the election.

    It says total voter numbers released by the electoral commission at 7.30pm on election night do not match the collective count on the days following. Between the close of polling and the announcement of results over the next 48 hours, a further 250000 votes appeared. The commission has refused to give total figures for 48 constituencies.

    In another violation of Zimbabwe law, the MDC says voting figures were not released at polling stations. In addition, the ink used to identify people who had voted had rubbed off easily, enabling people to vote more than once.

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