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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Delays
in election results puts country on edge
IRIN News
April 01, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77557
Three days after
Zimbabwe's 29 March poll, rumor, speculation and uncertainty are
the only tangible results of an election that has been billed as
President Robert Mugabe's final stand after 28 years in office.
Late on Tuesday the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC) announced that, out of a 210-seat parliament,
the ruling ZANU-PF party had secured 68 seats, the main opposition
party, Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
had won 67, while a breakaway faction of the MDC had picked up five.
Tsvangirai, declared
in his first public appearance since polling day at a press briefing
on Tuesday night at the Meikles Hotel in the capital, Harare: "There
is no doubt that we as the MDC have won the elections [both parliamentary
and presidential elections]."
There has been no official
word on the results of the three way presidential battle, pitting
Mugabe, Tsvangirai and former finance minister Simba Makoni for
the highest office, there is already speculation that the race will
enter a second round.
The Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), a nongovernmental electoral
monitoring organisation, is predicting a run off presidential ballot,
and believe that none of the three candidates secured more than
50 percent of the vote cast. To avoid a second round of voting one
of the candidates is required to obtain at least 51 percent of the
vote, to be declared outright winner.
On Tuesday night senior
military and political sources told IRIN that an all party meeting
was being held to try and work out a power sharing deal that would
allow Mugabe to exit with dignity.
No deals
Talks
of deal making were denied by both ZANU-PF and Tsvangirai.
"There is no way we can enter into any negotiations before
ZEC announces the full outcome of results...There are no discussions,
the stories are just mere speculation," Tsvangirai said.
Tsvangirai added that
should the ZEC not announce the results on Wednesday, then the MDC
would release the results it had collected from polling stations.
According to ZESN chairman,
Noel Kututwa, whose organization collated results posted outside
polling stations following each count, Tsvangirai was projected
to garner 49.4 percent of the vote, Mugabe 41.8 percent, and Makoni
8.2 percent.
"While it is the
responsibility of ZEC to announce the official results of the election,
it is the legal duty of election observers to provide the people
of Zimbabwe with independent nonpartisan information on all aspects
of the electoral process," Kututwa said.
The slow release of parliamentary
results, the absolute silence surrounding the outcome of the presidential
ballot and the increasing presence of police and army personel on
the streets of the capital, Harare, has led to mounting fears of
vote rigging and the belief that the government was preparing to
declare a state of emergency.
The Crisis
Coalition, an umbrella body of civil organisations, has made
an urgent petition to the Southern African Development Community
(SADC), a regional body, and the African Union to pressure Mugabe
to respect the will of the people and to speedily announce the elelction
results.
State
of emergency
Coalition
spokesperson, MacDonald Lewanika, said: "Of significant concern
are unconfirmed reports that the incumbent president is preparing
to declare a state of emergency after announcing inaccurate results.
"This is consistent
with the threats made by the security chiefs before elections that
they are not prepared to accept the election results if President
Mugabe and ZANU-PF lose the elections," he said.
The SADC Observer Mission
have already given the elections a clean bill of health. European
Union and United States observers were prevented from overseeing
the poll.
However, in declaring
the elections as credible, SADC said they were concerned about the
bias against the opposition by the state media, threatening statements
by the military, the presence of police officers in the polling
stations and the use of public resources for party political business.
The Zimbabwe
Human Rights Non governmental Organization Forum, a pro-democracy
body, said the SADC Observer Mission's statement that the election
was "an expression of the will of the people of Zimbabwe"
was premature.
"An election is
a process, not an event, which is only concluded when the results
have been communicated to and accepted by the electorate. The electorate
remains uninformed about the bulk of the results long after polls
were closed and votes counted," the human rights forum said
in a statement.
Irine Petras,
the director of Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, said the ZEC has been acting outside
its electoral mandate by announcing parliamentary results.
"Results of the
House of Assembly were announced and displayed at constituency centres.
It is the presidential results which ZEC should be announcing,"
Petras said.
ZANU-PF and MDC officials
told IRIN that Mugabe was delaying the release of the presidential
results and had deployed the military and the police onto the streets
as a bargaining tool.
The Electoral Institute
of Southern Africa (EISA) said the elections process had fallen
far short of democratic standards.
"The mission found
the electoral process to be severely wanting in respect of fairness
as most of the critical aspects of the process lacked transparency,"
EISA said in a statement.
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