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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
MDC pull out from presidential run-off election - Index of articles
Crackdown
hits new intensity
IRIN News
June 23, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78884
Despite furious
international criticism of political conditions in Zimbabwe ahead
of this week's presidential poll, riot police on Monday picked
up around 60 people - mostly women and children - sheltering
at the headquarters of the opposition party in the capital, Harare.
"The women and children
were victims of political violence, who had fled their homes in
rural areas and were at our head office seeking either legal or
medical attention," said Nelson Chamisa, spokesman for the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Meanwhile Zimbabwean
civil society has backed an MDC decision
to pull out of the presidential run-off on 27 June, saying it
would save lives. According to the MDC, more than 86 of its supporters
have been killed by ruling party militia since the first round elections
in March.
While announcing his
decision to withdraw from the poll, MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai
told a press briefing in Harare on Sunday that he was willing to
negotiate on a government of national unity, if it is seriously
proposed.
Tsvangirai has
since sought refuge
in the Dutch embassy in Harare, but has not applied for asylum.
Levy Mwanawasa, Zambian
president and the chair of the South African Development Community
(SADC) on Sunday also called for the postponement of the presidential
run-off on the grounds that conditions did not exist for a free
and fair ballot.
Tsvangirai's press briefing
came hours after the MDC were prevented from holding a public rally
in Harare on Sunday by the police and militants of the ruling ZANU-PF.
The MDC's decision to pullout has been interpreted by some analysts
as an attempt to persuade SADC, the African Union or the United
Nations to intervene decisively in the crisis.
Embarrassment
"I
really hope that most leaders will agree with me that the situation
in Zimbabwe does not allow for free and fair elections, and if allowed
to go ahead, the outcome of such an election will be an embarrassment
to the region and the continent as a whole," Mwanawasa told
a press briefing in the Zambian capital, Lusaka, on Sunday.
The African Union (AU)
Commission chair Jean Ping, has also reportedly voiced his concern,
and said he had started consultations with AU chairman Jakaya Kikwete,
the president of Tanzania, and with SADC to see what could be done.
Reuters reported that
Angola's foreign ministry said on Monday that SADC foreign ministers
were meeting in Luanda to discuss the Zimbabwe crisis and might
issue a statement later in the day.
Mwanawasa, explaining
his decision to call for a poll postponement, said over the past
five days he had tried to contact all SADC leaders: "But unfortunately
I have only managed to speak to not more than four - there
are supposed to be 14. Now I had an option to decide whether to
leave smatters the way they are or exercise my discretion as chairman
to do something which I consider to be right. I have decided to
exercise the second option."
UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon on Monday said he backed the SADC chair's call for an
election delay.
Tsvangirai said the beating
of MDC supporters on Sunday, in the presence of foreign election
observers, had convinced the party of the futility of participating
in the poll.
Patrick Chinamasa, the
minister of justice, told IRIN that the government did not take
Tsvangirai's threat seriously. "The law is very clear,
if Tsvangirai wants to pull out of the presidential race, he should
put that in writing and inform the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission.
"We are going ahead
with our campaign where we will romp home to an emphatic victory
on Friday. Tsvangirai is now afraid of a humiliating defeat, he
is running scared."
Withdraw
from parliament
Lovemore
Madhuku, chair of the National
Constitutional Assembly, an NGO lobbying for a "people-driven"
constitution, said the MDC's decision to pull out "will save
the lives of a lot of people but to complete the whole process the
MDC should also withdraw from parliament because if they attend
parliament they will be endorsing Mugabe's rule".
The MDC won the 29 March
parliamentary poll, and Tsvangirai beat incumbent Robert Mugabe
in the presidential election, but fell short of 50 percent of the
vote plus one to secure an outright victory.
Macdonald Lewanika,
spokesperson for the pro-democracy Crisis
Coalition, said SADC needed to help create the framework for
fair elections.
"Whether Mugabe
declares himself winner without an election or goes ahead with the
election without the MDC, he knows fully well that he is not legitimate,
so Zimbabwe's problems will not end," Lewanika said.
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