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Zimbabwe
poll a regional test - African observers
Cris Chinaka, Reuters
March 12, 2008
http://africa.reuters.com/top/news/usnBAN251229.html
Harare - African
vote monitors invited by President Robert Mugabe to observe elections
being questioned by his Western critics said on Wednesday that a
fair poll was important for Zimbabwe and the region.
The head of the 14-nation
Southern African Development Community observer mission dismissed
European Union concerns that the vote was unlikely to be free and
fair, saying it was wrong to pre-judge the process.
Mugabe, facing his biggest
electoral challenge since coming to power 28 years ago, barred observers
from Western countries he accuses of seeking to oust his ZANU-PF
party.
The 120-member regional
mission is the largest observer team to the March 29 presidential,
parliamentary and local government elections, and its head, Angolan
Foreign Minister Joao de Miranda, said on Wednesday its duty was
to promote democracy.
"We hope these elections
will be the most transparent and most fair elections," he said
at the launch of the mission, adding: "We hope the result will
reflect the political consensus of Zimbabweans."
Asked how SADC could
ensure a democratic election in a country whose polls have been
hotly disputed in the past, Miranda said:
"We need
to believe in our capacity...and it is important that SADC takes
(into account) the political integrity of its region, the peace,
stability, the solidarity."
"Our mission is
the advance of the principle of democratic elections... That is
also what is expected of the Zimbabwe people," he said.
On the EU reservations
that Zimbabwe's current political and economic situation could endanger
the holding of a free and fair election, Miranda suggested the Western
bloc was wrong.
"Those who are saying
that, are not on the ground," he said.
Zimbabwe said last week
Mugabe's government had selected 47 foreign observer teams, mostly
from Africa and Asia, "on the basis of reciprocity, objectivity
and impartiality in their relationship with Zimbabwe."
The most important election
contest will be between Mugabe, in power since independence from
Britain in 1980, former ally Simba Makoni and old rival Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the biggest faction of the main opposition Movement for
Democratic Change.
Critics say Mugabe has
rigged elections since 2000 to cling to power but the veteran Zimbabwean
leader denies the charge.
Mugabe accuses Western
countries, especially Britain and the United States, of sabotaging
Zimbabwe's economy and working with the opposition to oust him over
his controversial policy of seizing white-owned farms for redistribution
to blacks.
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