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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
MDC pull out from presidential run-off election - Index of articles
Southern
African leaders urge Zimbabwe to delay poll
Nasreen Seria and Brian Latham, Bloomberg.com
June 25, 2008
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601116&sid=atmMgP06hH2g&refer=africa
Southern African leaders
urged Zimbabwe to delay the runoff election in which President Robert
Mugabe hopes to extend his 28-year rule, as the main opposition
leader called for foreign help to end the country's political crisis.
Holding an election
under the current political climate in Zimbabwe "may undermine
the credibility and legitimacy of the outcome,'' Tomaz Salomao,
executive secretary of the Southern African Development Community,
told reporters in Mbabane, Swaziland, today. He spoke after a meeting
of the 14-nation group's defense committee, which oversees regional
security.
Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, pulled
out of the June 27 presidential runoff this week after 86 people
were killed and 200,000 forced from their homes in what his party
said is a state-sponsored campaign of violence. Tsvangirai called
on the African Union and SADC to lead a transition process and said
international peacekeepers should be deployed in the country.
"Because
of the current charged atmosphere, the parties and people of Zimbabwe
deserve a cooling off period,'' Salomao said. During the postponement,
"`the parties should engage in talks with the aim of finding
best possible ways of resolving their differences and creating a
conducive environment for holding the election.''
The SADC meeting,
which was also attended by African Union Chairman Jakaya Kikwete
and Swaziland's King Mswati, "noted with concern and disappointment''
that Tsvangirai had pulled out of the runoff, Salomao said. He didn't
elaborate.
Election
goes ahead
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, whose members are appointed by
Mugabe, said today that the vote will go ahead as planned because
Tsvangirai missed the 21-day deadline to withdraw. Tsvangirai announced
on June 22 he wouldn't participate.
``There has
been no change to our plans and everything is in place for the election,''
George Chiweshe, chairman of the commission, said in a telephone
interview today from the capital, Harare. "We don't recognize
his withdrawal.''
SADC's call
for a postponement of the election came after Tsvangirai urged African
leaders to support a transition process in Zimbabwe "which
takes into account the will of the Zimbabwean people as exercised
on March 29.''
``We have always maintained
that the Zimbabwean problem is an African problem that requires
an African solution,'' he said.
Increasing
attacks
Attacks on Tsvangirai and the MDC by Mugabe supporters have increased
since the party won the most votes in the first round of presidential
balloting on March 29 and took control of the parliament's House
of Assembly, according to groups including Amnesty International.
Yesterday, Mayemureyi
Munhuri, a newly elected MDC senator, and 33 of the party's supporters
were abducted by unidentified gunmen in the eastern district of
Gaza.
"Senator
Munhuri and her husband were abducted at gunpoint from their home
yesterday,'' MDC lawmaker Pishai Muchauraya said in a telephone
interview from Harare today. "It is a worrying trend because
we've seen an escalation in abductions since Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew
his nomination.''
The United Nations says
it will be impossible to hold a free and fair election on June 27,
while the U.S. and U.K. are leading international calls for the
vote to be postponed.
Tsvangirai said foreign
peacekeepers should be deployed to save democracy in his country.
'Protective
shield'
"The people of Zimbabwe need the words of indignation
from global leaders to be backed by the moral rectitude of military
force,'' Tsvangirai wrote in the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper today.
Peacekeepers would "separate the people from their oppressors
and cast the protective shield around the democratic process for
which Zimbabwe yearns.''
Mike Davies, an analyst
with the Eurasia Group in London, said foreign peacekeepers were
unlikely to be deployed in Zimbabwe because of regional reluctance
for outside involvement in the country's political affairs.
"It would
be incredibly challenging given the politics in Zimbabwe and in
the region to gain agreement on sending peacekeeping troops,'' Davies
said in a telephone interview. "There is also the issue of
capacity: the African Union is already stretched with their other
deployments in places such as Somalia and Sudan.''
In an e-mailed statement,
Tsvangirai said four steps must be taken to address the country's
political and economic crisis, including ending the violence and
allowing humanitarian assistance into the country. In addition lawmakers
elected in March should be sworn in, while all political prisoners
should be released.
Death
penalty
Tendai Biti, the deputy leader of the MDC, was arrested
on June 12 and may face treason
charges, which carry the death penalty.
"Let me
say clearly that there is no discussion about moving forward without
our Secretary-General Tendai Biti, who has been so instrumental
in all of our plans and discussions,'' Tsvangirai said. "Biti
is an indispensable asset of the MDC and the people of Zimbabwe.
He must be released immediately.''
South African President
Thabo Mbeki, who has been tasked by SADC with mediating to resolve
the crisis in Zimbabwe, didn't attend today's meeting, Kikwete said.
Mbeki briefed the security committee and King Mswati yesterday on
his efforts to mediate in the dispute.
"All that
he wanted us to know, he has communicated to us,'' Kikwete said.
"He briefed us on exactly where they are,'' he said, without
providing details.
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