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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabweans
vote - and wait: With no results expected for days, talk turns to
fears of fraud
Craig Timberg and Darlington Majonga, Washington Post
March 29, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/29/AR2008032900374.html
Zimbabweans
cast ballots Saturday with a mix of hope and dread, many longing
to end the 28-year reign of President Robert Mugabe but fearful
that no matter how they voted, he would declare himself the winner.
Lines formed
before dawn and were long throughout the day in urban opposition
strongholds. Dozens of voters at some polling stations discovered
they had been struck from official rolls. Though the election proceeded
mostly peacefully, such logistical barriers are among the many tools
Mugabe's opponents say he has to skew the results, which are expected
to be announced in the next few days.
"I'm fed
up with the way things are in Zimbabwe," said Abigail Magombedze,
26, an unemployed woman whose name was missing from the voter list
in Chitungwiza, a bedroom community south of Harare, the capital.
"This doesn't surprise me because these guys have always been
rigging."
The expectation
of manipulation so infuses discussion of this election that debate
has turned to how voters will react if results show that Mugabe
has won yet again despite a decade-long national collapse so complete
that schools lack teachers, stores lack food and the few still with
jobs lack bus fare to work. Many Zimbabweans insist that the official
inflation rate of 100,000 percent is an underestimate.
The legions
of supporters of opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai have sorted
themselves into two categories: those who are preparing to swallow
election results they don't believe, and those who are planning
to resist. The past few days have featured bold pronouncements that
major street protests, all but unprecedented here, will materialize.
Tsvangirai has urged voters to mass at the 9,000 polling stations
across the nation to "protect our votes."
"The people's
victory is assured despite the attempts of the regime to subvert
the people's will," Tsvangirai told reporters after casting
his ballot.
But a University
of Zimbabwe political analyst, Eldred Masunungure, said his study
of the national political culture shows that voters are strongly
disinclined to challenge Mugabe, who has made clear his willingness
to use the police, military and intelligence services to crush dissent.
Over the past two days, officers have been posted at urban intersections
and countless highway roadblocks in this country of 12 million.
Masunungure
said that an overwhelming turnout by the opposition might persuade
Mugabe and his inner circle to step aside. But if they don't, he
said, Tsvangirai and his supporters have few options.
"People
will be frustrated. There will be a sense of foreboding, and a sense
of helplessness," Masunungure said. "But that sense of
helplessness will not be translated into political action. . . .
I don't think so."
Yet some opposition
figures have warned that a rigged outcome -- coming off widely denounced
elections in 2000, 2002 and 2005 -- would tip the nation into violence
resembling the slaughter in Kenya after that nation's flawed presidential
election in December. Police reported Saturday that a gasoline bomb
was found at the home of a ruling party legislator in Bulawayo,
an opposition stronghold, suggesting that tensions are not far from
the surface. There were no injuries.
"We should
do something about Mugabe," said Tsvangirai supporter Robert
Wilson, 35, a former truck driver, in the town of Marondera, about
45 miles east of Harare. "If Mugabe wins, there will be civil
war like the Kenya one."
Former Mugabe
finance minister Simba Makoni, who defected from the ruling party
in February to run for president, has been joining Tsvangirai's
warnings in recent days that Mugabe, 84, intends to steal his way
to another term in office.
Mugabe has repeatedly
denied the allegations.
"We don't
rig elections. We have a sense of honesty. I cannot sleep with my
conscience if I have cheated," Mugabe told reporters Saturday.
Mugabe's supporters
expressed confidence in the fairness of the electoral system and
predicted he would win fairly. They blamed Zimbabwe's economic troubles
on U.S. and European sanctions rather than government economic mismanagement.
"We have
faith in him," said Bigknock Marikopo, 55, a farmer. "You
can't blame your father because he's poor."
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