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Election
reform or boycott, vows Zimbabwe opposition leader Tsvangirai
Jonga
Kandemiiri, Voice of America (VOA)
September 28, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2007-09-28-voa51.cfm
Zimbabwean opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai reiterated Friday that his faction of the
Movement for Democratic Change will boycott the national elections
set for March 2008 if there is not significant further progress
in the crisis resolution talks with the ruling ZANU-PF party being
held with the help of South African mediators.
Tsvangirai's
warning closely followed the declaration by President Robert Mugabe
in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly saying that a
recent deal between his ruling party and the opposition on a compromise
version of an amendment
to the constitution showed the country was well on its way to
democratic elections.
Tsvangirai told African
envoys that his opposition faction won't participate in the March
balloting unless the Pretoria talks yield major improvements in
election conditions.
Tsvangirai and rival
opposition faction leader Arthur Mutambara have warned before that
their participation in elections is contingent on reforms of electoral
laws and firm assurances that Harare will not tilt the playing field
as it is alleged to have done in previous elections including the
2000 general and 2002 presidential election.
The constitutional amendment
will add 60 seats to the lower house of parliament, but there will
be 90 additional constituencies to contest - another 30 seats previously
filled by presidential appointment or ex officio will now be electively
filled. Skeptics say the ruling party is likely to use the creation
of new constituencies to gerrymander.
Web-based news agency
ZimOnline quoted Tsvangirai as telling the envoys that the amendment
deal was a "confidence building" exercise to test ZANU-PF
sincerity.
Tsvangirai spokesman
William Bango told reporter Jonga Kandemiiri of VOA's Studio 7 for
Zimbabwe that issues like emigré voting rights and the repeal
of repressive laws like the Public Order and Security Act remain
to be dealt with in the negotiations.
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