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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe
announces election date as political rivals disappear
Peta Thornycroft, Voice of America (VOA)
January 25, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-01-25-voa37.cfm
Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe announced on Friday that general elections would be
held on March 29, when he will seek a sixth term in office. Peta
Thornycroft reports that on February 8, candidates will have to
register at the nomination court but there are likely to be only
two political parties there -- the ruling Zanu PF and the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change.
In a presidential proclamation,
the 83-year-old leader said that said the elections would be held
the day after the parliament in Harare is dissolved.
Zimbabwe's main opposition
party had threatened to boycott the elections unless it gets guarantees
they will be free and fair. But, the MDC on Friday stopped short
of calling for a boycott, calling the announcement an "act
of madness and arrogance."
Recent elections have
been characterized by violence against the opposition and accusations
of rigging - charges denied by Mr. Mugabe.
Several amendments to
existing media, security and election laws became effective January
11. These reforms were the result of negotiations that began last
April between the two main political parties - the MDC and the ruling
Zanu-PF - mediated by South African President Thabo Mbeki.
The opposition has demanded
a new constitution, agreed to in the talks, should be in place before
the election and said polling should be delayed to allow people
time to understand the new laws.
Mr. Mugabe's announcement
is more evidence that he has no intention of allowing the new constitution
to be implemented before the polls. And, while new security laws
came into effect on January 11, Zimbabwe police clamped down hard
on opposition protesters, beating them as they made their way to
a rally on Wednesday, following the brief detention of the founding
president of the country's political opposition Morgan Tsvangirai.
Zimbabwe's Independent
Media Monitoring
Project said Friday in its weekly report, the state press has
violated new media laws on political reporting.
The joint parliamentary,
and presidential and senate election will be held while the country
suffers from an economic meltdown with the annual rate of inflation
officially put at nearly 8,000 percent. Unemployment is at around
80 percent while basic foodstuffs such as cooking oil and sugar
are now either scarce or too expensive for ordinary people to afford.
The World Bank has said inflation is as high as 150,000 percent.
Mugabe blames the country's
economic woes on a limited program of personal travel sanctions
imposed by the European Union and United States that target only
the ruling elite after they said he rigged his re- election in 2002.
Mr. Mugabe, who has ruled
the former British colony since independence in 1980, was confirmed
as the ZANU-PF's candidate at a party conference held in the capital
Harare last month.
Zimbabwe political heavyweight
and academic, Ibbo Mandaza tried to persuade a former finance minister,
Simba Makoni to stand against President Mugabe in the poll. Mr.
Makoni this week declined. Other opponents of President Mugabe within
Zanu-PF also dropped out, according to party insiders who asked
not to be identified.
Most Zanu-PF politician
are financially dependent on special favors that come with senior
positions in the party, such as cheap fuel and foreign exchange.
Insiders in Zanu-PF say
there was no one in the party prepared to risk losing the financial
perks by taking on President Mugabe. Few Zanu-PF leaders have managed
to create successful businesses or farm the formerly white-owned
land they have been given since 2000.
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