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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe's
ruling party considers defeat
Angus Shaw, Associated Press
April 01, 2008
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jaGkiD_oeuNCWUEr7YyXikc7dKZQD8VP3BU80
Top members of President
Robert Mugabe's party are worried the government may have lost weekend
elections, an independent African monitor said Tuesday, even as
a tediously slow release of results fueled fears of rigging.
Zimbabwe's opposition
has claimed victory in Saturday's presidential and parliamentary
elections. Independent observers say trends support opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai winning the largest number of votes in the presidential
race, but not enough to avoid a runoff.
Mugabe has been accused
of stealing past elections, though that was before Zimbabwe's economy
collapsed and leading members of his own party openly defied him.
Marwick Khumalo, head
of the Pan-African Parliament observer mission, indicated the ruling
ZANU-PF party was considering the possibility of defeat.
"I was talking to
some of the big wigs in the ruling party and they also are concerned
about the possibility of a change of guard," he told South
African Broadcasting Corp.'s SAfm radio.
"ZANU-PF has actually
been institutionalized in the lives of Zimbabweans, so it is not
easy for anyone within the sphere of the ruling party to accept
that 'maybe we might be defeated or might have been defeated,'"
he added.
It took the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission 30 hours to release results for 132 parliamentary
seats, giving the Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change 68
seats, including six for a breakaway faction. Mugabe's party had
64.
The commission has offered
no results in the presidential race.
Lovemore Sekeramayi,
an electoral official, went on state television Tuesday to say the
commission was receiving presidential votes and would need to collate
and verify them.
"We urge all Zimbabweans
to remain patient as we go through this meticulous process,"
he said.
Some feared the delay
was to allow time to rig the tally from Saturday's polls.
Tsvangirai's party said
he was leading the presidential race with 60 percent of votes, based
on counts reported from 128 of the 210 parliamentary districts.
The party gave Mugabe
30 percent of the votes and the rest to Simba Makoni, a former Mugabe
loyalist. Tsvangirai lost narrowly in 2002, according to official
results that observers charged were rigged. The opposition party
also claimed it had an overwhelming lead of 96 of the 128 parliamentary
seats for which it had results.
"We have won an
election. Mugabe's victory is not possible given the true facts,"
Tendai Biti, secretary-general of Tsvangirai's party, told reporters
Monday.
If the margins reported
by the MDC hold, it would be a crushing blow to Mugabe, who headed
a guerrilla movement that fought a seven-year bush war to end white
minority rule and bring democracy to Zimbabwe in 1980.
Mugabe was hailed then
for his policies of racial reconciliation and development that brought
education and health to millions denied those services under colonial
rule. Zimbabwe's economy thrived on exports of food, minerals and
tobacco.
The unraveling began
when Mugabe ordered the often-violent seizures of white-owned commercial
farms, ostensibly to return them to the landless black majority.
Instead, Mugabe replaced a white elite with a black one, giving
the farms to relatives, friends and cronies who allowed cultivated
fields to be taken over by weeds.
Today, a third of the
population depends on imported food handouts. Another third has
fled the country as economic and political refugees and 80 percent
is jobless. Life expectancy has fallen from 60 to 35 years and shortages
of food, medicine, water, electricity and fuel are chronic.
John Makumbe, a political
scientist at the University of Zimbabwe, said the ruined economy
had been Mugabe's downfall: "All other indications are the
voting reflected Mugabe's massive loss of support because of the
economy."
The Zimbabwe Election
Support Network, a coalition of 38 Zimbabwe civil society organizations,
said its random representative sample of polling stations showed
Tsvangirai won just over 49 percent of the vote. A presidential
candidate needs at least 50 percent plus one vote to avoid a runoff.
Mugabe was projected to come in second with about 42 percent, and
Makoni trailed at about 8 percent.
The coalition said it
based its projections on tallies posted at a representative, random
sample of 435 polling stations in Zimbabwe's 10 provinces, and that
its work was reviewed by an independent statistician.
The opposition figures
come from results ordered to be posted on the doors of the 9,000
polling stations in the country. This initiative, part of an agreement
between the parties negotiated by South African President Thabo
Mbeki, was new and could make it more difficult to cheat.
Still, Mugabe has powerful
backers who have benefited from his rule. While younger army officers
are reported to be losing patience with Mugabe, security chiefs
said before the election they would not accept an opposition victory.
Military officers and
ruling party leaders receive mining concessions, construction contracts
and preferential licenses to run transport companies and other businesses.
Amid the ruins, a rapacious
minority grew richer under Mugabe, its wealth displayed through
the preponderance of luxury vehicles seen around Harare, including
many a Mercedez-Benz and even a few Hummers.
The regime's friends
might be concerned, along with Mugabe, by opposition calls for Mugabe
to be tried for human rights abuses, perhaps in an international
court.
There are fears of violence
if Mugabe loses, and fears of violence if he wins.
Biti, secretary-general
of Tsvangirai's party, feared people might be "seduced into
violence," which could create an excuse for a military crackdown.
"Zimbabweans are
not a violent people and we hope people are not provoked into violence
if official results differ from those posted at polling stations,"
he said.
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