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Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
ZANU-PF
wins two thirds majority
The
Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)
April 03, 2005
http://www.sundaymail.co.zw/index.php?id=10880&pubdate=2005-04-03
The ruling ZANU-PF
party has won its targetted two-thirds parliamentary majority in
Zimbabwe’s 150-seat legislature after capturing 78 seats against
the main opposition MDC’s 41 in the just-ended parliamentary elections.
ZANU-PF trounced the opposition, meaning that it will surpass the
two-thirds mark (which is 100 seats) by eight seats when President
Mugabe appoints the 30 non-constituency Members of Parliament. The
ruling party won a comfortable 65 percent of the contested seats
while the MDC got slightly over 34 percent.
In the last
five constituencies’ results released yesterday evening, Zanu-PF
made a clean sweep in all the four Gokwe constituencies in the Midlands
province while the MDC retained its grip on the Binga seat. The
poll has already been endorsed by international observers as peaceful
and having been in compliance with the SADC Principles and Guidelines
Governing Democratic Elections.
ZANU-PF made
inroads into what have been traditional MDC strongholds, particularly
in the urban areas while the MDC lost a significant number of seats
it previously held. ZANU-PF’s maintained its traditional strong
showing in its rural strongholds. The ruling party sprang a surprise
when its candidate and sitting city of Harare councilor Cde Hubert
Nyanhongo won the Harare South constituency in metropolitan Harare,
an MDCs stronghold. This feat was repeated in Chegutu and Chinhoyi
towns although these are mixed seats, meaning they have both the
rural and urban components.
Other notable
inroads made by ZANU-PF in the opposition’s territory have been
in Bubi-Umguza in Matabeleland North, where Cde Obert Mpofu polled
15 158
votes against sitting MDC’s MP Thabane Jacob’s 9 502. In Matabeleland
South Zanu-PF’s Cde Abedinico Ncube won the Gwanda constituency
that was being also contested by MDC spokesman Mr Paul Themba Nyathi,
while the ruling party lost the Lupane seat in Matabeleland North
to the opposition.
The party remarkably
recovered the rural seats it had lost in Manicaland. Cde Samuel
Undenge surprised all and sundry when he wrestled the Chimanimani
constituency from the MDC, whose candidate Mrs Eileen Heather Bennett
failed in her bid to replace her husband Roy, the jailed former
Member of Parliament for the constituency. ZANU-PF also reclaimed
the Nyanga and Mutare South seats from the MDC while it won the
new Mutasa North and Mutasa South constituencies.
The biggest
surprise came from Chipinge South where for the first time since
independence the people of the constituency, who had always voted
for ZANU, this time voted for ZANU-PF candidate Cde Enock Porusingazi,
dumping Mr Wilson Kumbula, the outgoing MP who represented ZANU.
Cde Josphat Madubeko of ZANU-PF snatched the Gweru Rural seat from
MDC shadow minister of agriculture Mr Renson Gasela. Four seats
in the Midlands province went to the opposition while 12 seats are
now under ZANU-PF control.
Besides the
MDC retaining its stranglehold in cities like Harare, Bulawayo,
Masvingo, Gweru, Mutare and Kwekwe, it managed to remain a major
force in rural Matabeleland, although it did lose significant ground
there. Outside the two western provinces, it did not win a non-urban
seat. ZANU-PF made a clean sweep in Mashonaland Central where Cde
Nicholas Goche polled 29 287 against MDC’s 4 848 in Shamva and in
Mashonaland East where its candidate for Uzumba-Pfungwe-Maramba
constituency, Cde Kenneth Mutiwekuziva, polled 31 357
against MDC Stewart Pairemanzi’s 3 289.
The ruling party
almost cleaned out Masvingo province. The Masvingo Central seat
is the only one that was lost to the MDC whose candidate, Mr Tongai
Matutu, beat Cde Shylet Uyoyo of ZANU-PF, albeit by a margin of
just 195 votes.
Although ZANU-PF
had fielded 31 women candidates in fulfilment of its one-third women
representation policy, several of these were defeated by other MDC
candidates and in some cases by women too. In Glen Norah constituency
sitting MDC MP Mrs Priscilla Misihairambwi-Mushonga contested and
won against ZANU-PF’s Cde Victoria Chitepo. But the policy has paid
dividends as ZANU-PF now has 13 elected female MPs, an improvement
from the last parliament’s six while the opposition has seven seats
that are held by women.
The ruling party’s
Women’s League secretary, Cde Oppah Muchinguri, will be returning
to Parliament after a five-year absence following her defeat by
MDC’s Mrs Evelyn Masaiti in 2000. Other ZANU-PF newcomers in Parliament
include Cdes Celine Pote (Chiredzi North), Acqalinah Katsande (Mudzi
West), Mabel Mawere (Zaka West), Enita Ziriri (Chivi North), Cecilia
Dausi (Hurungwe West), and Esther Nyauchi in Gokwe Sengwa. Vice-President
Joyce Mujuru, Cde Shuvai Mahofa, Cde Olivia Muchena and Cde Flora
Bhuka bounced back into Parliament. The MDC lost some female MPs.
Ms Hilda Suka-Mafudze who was MDC MP for Mhondoro in the last Parliament,
this time contested and lost to Zanu-PF’s Cde Patrick Zhuwao in
Manyame. Ms Evelyn Masaiti lost in Mutasa North to Zanu-PF’s Cde
Mike Nyambuya.
Although the
combined number of women MPs for both parties is nowhere near the
adopted African Union protocol of one-third women representation,
the figure of 19 women in Parliament will make them more visible
both in the House and hopefully in national debates. Parliament
will also have a number of new faces. New ZANU-PF MPs include Cde
Porusingazi, Cde Bright Matonga (Ngezi), Sylvester Nguni (Mhondoro),
Cde Zhuwao, Cde Leo Mugabe (Makonde), Cde Undenge, Cde Faber Chidarikire
(Chinhoyi), Cde Nyanhongo, Cde Celine Pote and Cde Nyambuya.
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