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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
sets March 29 for presidential, parliament elections; opposition
had wanted delay
Associated
Press
January 25, 2008
http://www.pr-inside.com/zimbabwe-sets-march-29-for-presidential-r405353.htm
Harare, Zimbabwe: President
Robert Mugabe has set national elections for March 29, according
to a presidential proclamation issued Friday that angered the opposition,
which had called for the vote to be put back until constitutional
disputes were settled.
The proclamation
was published by the state printer in Harare, though it was not
publicized by the state broadcaster, the country's sole radio and
television station, in its daytime news bulletins Friday. The proclamation
also dissolved parliament, which was already in recess and not due
to reconvene until April, in preparation for the vote.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change had demanded more constitutional and electoral
reforms before the election, and said polling should be delayed
until June to allow for its demands to be met. Mugabe, though, had
insisted national elections would take place by the end of March.
Friday's proclamation
"is an ambush," said MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa, calling
on regional leaders to intervene. South African President Thabo
Mbeki was chosen by the Southern African Development Community,
or SADC, as chief mediator last year to try to resolve Zimbabwe's
deepening political and economic crisis through dialogue between
Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party and the opposition.
"We are supposed
to be having dialogue, yet this is a slap in the face of SADC, of
African solutions to African problems," Chamisa said. "Mugabe
is undermining this process. The issue of date (of elections) was
supposed to be made by mutual agreement between the opposition and
the regime."
Ronnie Mamoepa, spokesman
for South Africa's foreign affairs ministry, said his government
had not been informed the date had been set.
Chamisa said the South African-mediated talks had been deadlocked
over constitutional issues and an election date.
"Before this is
unlocked, Mugabe runs away from the negotiating table and mischievously
announces the (election) date," Chamisa said. "Surely
it is an act of madness."
Skirmishes between the
opposition and police earlier this week had increased fears there
would be little chance of free and fair campaigning ahead of voting.
State television on Friday
quoted police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena as accusing the opposition
of threatening unrest on the scale of "what has been happening
in Kenya."
At least 700 people have
died in political unrest after disputed presidential elections in
Kenya in December.
Zimbabwe opposition supporters
heading on foot to a rally addressed by opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai on Wednesday were dispersed police who fired tear gas
and charged at the crowd.
Bvudzijena said 15 opposition
protesters were arrested and fined on Wednesday after admitting
to an offence of "criminal nuisance."
He alleged they "provoked
innocent people" on the streets by dancing, chanting, throwing
stones and waving political placards at passers-by after a court
had barred them from marching. While the march was barred, the court
had approved the rally.
Wednesday's
protest had been the first test of reforms to ease security and
media laws negotiated by the opposition in the South African-mediated
talks.
Campaigning had been severely restricted in the past under sweeping
public order regulations.
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