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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
Zimbabwe's
neighbours endorse Mugabe
AFP
April 03, 2005
http://finance.news.com.au/story/print/0,10119,12743547,00.html
ZIMBABWE'S southern African neighbours
have endorsed elections that handed a massive victory to President
Robert Mugabe's ruling party, saying they reflected "the will
of the people.''
An 11-country observer mission from
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) brushed aside
opposition complaints of irregularities in a quarter of the constituencies,
citing a lack of proof.
"Let me congratulate
the people of Zimbabwe for holding a peaceful, credible and well-organised
election which we feel reflects the will of the people,'' said Phumzile
Mlambo Ngcuka, the South African cabinet minister who led the 55-member
mission.
Mlambo Ngcuka
said the observer mission had asked the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) to provide evidence to support their claims
of discrepancies in 32 of the 120 constituencies.
"We have
received complaints and asked for information. We still don't have
it. There is not much more we can do,'' she said.
Mugabe's ruling
ZANU-PF party won a two-thirds majority in the elections on Thursday
that the opposition slammed as a "massive fraud'', refusing
to recognise the outcome.
MDC leader Morgan
Tsvangirai told AFP in an interview on Friday that there were discrepancies
between the number of voters who cast ballots and the tally from
the final result in several constituencies.
"He (Mugabe)
is going to do what he wants, this is his private property and for
people to even claim that this is a democratic process, when it
is so fraudulent, is totally not acceptable,'' Tsvangirai said.
The SADC mission
noted problems with media coverage that they said favoured candidates
from the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front
(ZANU-PF).
It also found
that some Zimbabweans - 10 per cent according to official figures
- had been turned away from the polling stations because their names
were not on the voters' roll or they did not provide the proper
documents to be able to vote, a shortcoming attributed to voter
education.
But Malmbo Ngcuka
insisted that "in the end, there was one person, one vote,
and it was secret''.peFormer colonial ruler Britain, the United
States, Canada and the European Union said the parliamentary elections
were not free and fair even though they were peaceful, in contrast
to the past two elections that were marred by violence.
South Africa's
observer mission also said the elections "reflect the will
of the people of Zimbabwe.''
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