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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Tension
rises as opposition claims landslide
IRIN
News
March 30, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77518
While Zimbabwe's
opposition on Sunday claimed a landslide victory, no official results
from the 29 March polls have been released by the electoral commission,
cranking up the tension surrounding the vote count.
Christian Alliance, a
grouping of pro-democracy church organisations, said the "deep
silence" from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) was
causing undue alarm.
"To avoid any further
distress, and in order to calm all the citizens, we urgently appeal
to ZEC and other relevant authorities to immediately release all
results that are now available. Any further delay could lead to
unpredictable and undesirable behaviour by the citizens as they
continue to rely on unofficial results," Bishop Levy Kadenge,
the Christian Alliance convenor, told IRIN.
Those unofficial results
put the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and its leader Morgan
Tsvangirai well ahead in urban areas - as was expected. But the
party has also reportedly done remarkably well in the countryside,
the traditional stronghold of President Robert Mugabe. Several cabinet
ministers and leading members of the ruling ZANU-PF party may have
lost their seats, which set off celebrations in the capital, Harare.
"We are not in any
doubt. We are heading for a landslide victory, we have won many
seats . . . throughout the country," said MDC secretary
general Tendai Biti.
The MDC's count
was based on the results posted outside each voting centre on Sunday
morning. But they are yet to be endorsed by the ZEC, which wants
to scrutinise the returns from each constituency at its "Command
Centre", set up at the Harare Conference Centre. "I'm
as anxious as you are to know the outcome of the election,"
ZEC chairman George Chiweshe told journalists.
The opposition alleges
that the delay in releasing the results is evidence that electoral
fraud is underway. "They have the figures, everyone saw the
figures. They were shocked into immobility by what they saw. They
are now trying to cook the figures," claimed a political analyst,
who asked not to be named.
ZEC, whose chair and
six members are appointed by Mugabe, has been widely criticized
by the opposition and civil society for alleged partiality and lack
of capacity to run the three elections - local, parliamentary
and presidencial - held on Saturday. Former freedom fighter Mugabe,
84, has led Zimbabwe since independence in 1980.
Free
and fair
ZEC chief elections officer,
Lovemore Sekeramayi, went on national television and radio to warn
the opposition against releasing voting figures. "Those results
are not official. The official results will be announced to the
nation by the commission and we urge the nation to bear with us
while we complete the process of collation and verification."
Meanwhile, the head of
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) observer mission,
Jose Marcos Barrica, said despite concerns over media bias and pro-Mugabe
remarks by the military top brass, the elections were a "credible
expression of the will of the people".
Voting on Saturday was
peaceful with thousands of voters camping outside polling stations
from 4 a.m - three hours before doors opened. Tendai McNab
had come equipped with a folding chair. "When I last voted
in 2000, I spent more than 10 hours in the queue, but this time
I am prepared. I will just sit patiently while reading a book."
A heavily pregnant Tendai
Munyoro, waiting outside the polling station at David Livingstone
School in Harare, said she wanted to cast her ballot for the good
of her children. "I declared to myself that no matter what
condition I would be in, I would cast my vote."
South Africa-based political
activist Nixon Nyikadzino said thousands of Zimbabweans, who had
migrated across the border to escape the country's long-running
economic and political crisis, had trooped back home to cast their
vote. "Over the last months, discussions in South Africa have
been about arranging transport to come back and vote . . . Huge
numbers have also come back from countries within the region such
as Botswana, Zambia, Mozambique and Namibia."
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