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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
opposition claims poll victory, trend 'irreversible'
Brian
Latham, Bloomberg
March 30, 2008
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aHGiFy2kTyc4&refer=home
Zimbabwe's main opposition Movement for Democratic
Change said it has won national presidential and parliamentary elections,
based on early results posted at polling stations.
The party, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, garnered at
least 66 percent of the votes cast in the capital, Harare, Secretary
General Tendai Biti said in an interview today from the city. The
MDC leads in Mashonaland Central province and won a majority in
the southern province of Masvingo, traditionally a stronghold for
President Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front party, he said.
"This is
just an example of what we're getting from every province,'' Biti
said. "In our view the trend is irreversible and, barring a
miracle, Mugabe can't win. We've won this election.''
Poll officials began counting ballots last night
in an election in which Mugabe, 84, is seeking to extend his 28-year
rule of the southern African nation. Tsvangirai, 56, and Simba Makoni,
a 58-year-old former finance minister, were his main challengers
in the contest. No official results have been announced yet and
the final tally may only be known later this week.
The MDC, which
has been battling Zanu-PF since 2000, also won a seat in Mugabe's
home province of Mashonaland West, Biti said. In Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's
second-biggest city, the MDC has a "narrow lead'' over Makoni
with Zanu-PF in third place, he said.
Yesterday's election was held amid accusations by
human rights groups including Amnesty International that the government
harassed the opposition and vowed to cut off food supplies to voters
who didn't back the ruling party.
'Victory
Assured'
Mugabe, in power since Zimbabwe gained its independence
in 1980, won elections in 2000, 2002 and 2005 that were marred by
violence and electoral irregularities, according to most observers
of the poll. Western monitors and media were barred from witnessing
this year's ballot.
"Victory
is assured in spite of the Mugabe regime's attempt to subvert the
election and the will of the people,'' Tsvangirai said in a telephone
interview from Harare today.
Zimbabwe's export-based economy, once southern Africa's
second-biggest, started to collapse after Mugabe seized white-owned
commercial farms in 2000 to give to blacks deprived of land during
colonial rule. That's caused shortages of food and fuel and pushed
the inflation rate to 100,580 percent.
To contact the
reporter on this story: Brian Latham via the Johannesburg bureau
on pmrichardson@bloomberg.net
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