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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
State
department criticizes plan to recount March 29 presidential vote
Stephen
Kaufman, USINFO
April 16, 2008
http://www.america.gov/st/democracy-english/2008/April/20080415155041esnamfuak0.1221735.html?CP.rss=true
Washington -- The Bush
administration has condemned forces loyal to Zimbabwe's government
for using violence against opposition supporters, and U.S. officials
also criticized Zimbabwe's electoral authorities for their plan
to recount the March 29 presidential vote.
State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said members of Zimbabwe's security forces and supporters
of President Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party have been using
violence and intimidation in the wake of Zimbabwe's March 29 presidential
and parliamentary elections.
"These incidents
appear to target individuals who voted against ZANU-PF candidates
during the elections," McCormack said in an April 11 statement.
Calling on Mugabe's government
to stop perpetrating such incidents immediately and to show restraint
and respect for human rights, McCormack said there is "no place
for violence or intimidation in a democratic society."
The State Department
also updated its travel alert to American citizens in Zimbabwe April
11, saying that some military and police forces, as well as war
veterans, are "creating a climate of intimidation and fear
across the country."
The travel alert said
Americans should be aware that these forces have been especially
active in rural areas and high-density suburbs. "There have
been attacks on opposition supporters, renewed farm invasions, and
arrests of election officials accused of vote tampering. There is
a continued risk of arbitrary detention or arrest," the travel
alert said.
President Bush telephoned
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon April 15 to discuss the situation
in Zimbabwe, according to White House national security spokesman
Gordon Johndroe. According to Johndroe, Bush told Ban it is "important
for the situation in Zimbabwe to be resolved peacefully and soon.
It's gone on too long."
In remarks to reporters
April 15, McCormack said Zimbabwe "is in a crisis," both
politically, because the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) has
refused to announce the results of the March 29 presidential contest,
and economically, because of long-standing government policies that
have led to hyperinflation, food shortages and mass unemployment.
Despite never having
released the presidential ballot results, the commission, which
is made up of individuals appointed by Mugabe's government, now
is calling for a recount of the vote.
McCormack criticized
the idea, saying "there has not been a good chain-of-custody
regime in place" for the ballots and ballot boxes since the
March 29 vote. "Anything could have happened between election
day and when a recount takes place, and that's a cause of deep concern
not only for the United States but other countries around the globe,"
he said.
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