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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Robert
Mugabe 'printing fake ballots to rig poll'
Peta Thornycroft and Sebastien Berger, The Telegraph
March 24, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/24/wzim124.xml
Opposition leaders warn
the Zimbabwean government is printing millions more ballot papers
than there are registered electors - raising fears of a huge vote-rigging
operation ahead of next weekend's election.
The registered electorate
for the presidential and parliamentary polls is about 5.9 million.
But the Movement for Democratic Change says it has obtained leaked
documents showing nine million papers have been ordered.
Robert Mugabe, who is
seeking a sixth term in office, is in a three-way fight with MDC
leader Morgan Tsvangirai and Simba Makoni, a former finance minister
in the ruling Zanu-PF party.
If used in Mr Mugabe's
favour the extra ballot papers would be enough to ensure that he
passes the 51 per cent of the vote required to be declared the outright
victor.
Documents also show that
600,000 ballot papers have been ordered for a few thousand soldiers
and state employees working away from home, the MDC says.
The number of Zimbabweans
who have left the country's economic turmoil to seek a better life
abroad is estimated to be between one to three million. But despite
opposition demands during talks mediated by the South African government,
the diaspora has not been granted the right to vote.
Tendai Biti, the MDC's
secretary-general, said: "We are extremely worried about the
extra ballot papers. If he steals the election, he will get a temporary
reprieve. But that will guarantee him a dishonourable if not bloody
exit. Either way he's in a no-win situation."
Mr Mugabe is widely believed
to have stolen the last election in 2002. This time around, observers
from Western governments have been banned and few independent media
accreditations have been issued. The electoral roll is allegedly
padded with the names of dead people and polling stations are relatively
few in the opposition strongholds of Harare and Bulawayo, with procedures
being changed to allow police into them.
At a rally in Harare,
Mr Tsvangirai told tens of thousands of supporters: "The polling
stations will open late and there will be no power, no lights. They
will have trouble with the toilets and they will be in a muddle
with the ballots and the voters' roll."
The veteran opposition
leader is enjoying a surge in support in the run-up to the election,
which Mr Makoni's candidacy has made the most open since independence.
Zimbabwe's economy went
into reverse after Mr Mugabe began seizing white-owned farms in
2000. It is the fastest shrinking in the world outside a war zone.
Inflation is running at more than 100,000 per cent. About 80 per
cent of the population is unemployed and a third needs food aid.
Mr Mugabe admitted at
the weekend he was not immune to the deteriorating infrastructure,
revealing there was no running water at his residence.
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