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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
election may go to runoff
Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times
April 01, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-zimbabwe1apr01,0,4122283.story
Signs continued to point
Monday to either a runoff or outright defeat for longtime ruler
Robert Mugabe in the weekend presidential election, but no final
overall count was released for a second straight day.
According to initial
official results released by the Zimbabwe Election Commission, with
66 of 210 parliament seats decided, Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party
was one seat ahead of the main opposition party with no presidential
results announced. The ruling party had won 31 seats and the opposition
30. Five went to other parties.
An independent
monitoring group, the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network, released a sample from 435 polling
stations that showed opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai winning
49.4% of the vote and Mugabe 41.4%. A presidential candidate would
win outright by receiving more than 50% of the vote.
If there was a runoff,
many believe Mugabe would lose because Tsvangirai would gain a large
percentage of votes from the third main candidate, Simba Makoni,
a ruling party defector and former finance minister. The runoff
would be held within 21 days.
As opposition observers
continued to predict a victory over Mugabe and declared that his
ruling party was in shock, Britain, Germany, the U.S. and the European
Union called on the national election commission to speed up the
release of final results.
Although commission results
have only trickled out, final counts at individual polling stations
were made public for the first time, and some analysts said they
would be difficult to tamper with. ZANU-PF lost key rural strongholds,
including a seat in Mugabe's home village, according to the initial
results.
With tension growing,
riot police were reported in townships near Harare where opposition
support is strongest.
Mugabe, whose 28-year
autocratic tenure has been buffeted by a rapidly escalating economic
crisis, met in emergency session with military and security chiefs.
In recent weeks, several hard-line security chiefs said they would
not serve Tsvangirai, and last week Mugabe said the opposition leader
would never be allowed to rule Zimbabwe.
"Without doubt they're
in shock," said former ruling party Information Minister Jonathan
Moyo. "Right now they're facing the fact that it's either Morgan
[Tsvangirai] winning or a runoff, which Mugabe won't win,"
said Moyo, who ran as an independent.
Moyo dismissed the possibility
that the voting results could be fixed.
"They can't fix
it. It's unfixable, because there will be a wave of momentum that
will be too much," he said.
One ZANU-PF insider who
asked to remain anonymous expressed a similar view, saying that
the government wanted to "manage" public emotion over
an opposition victory and prevent disorder or looting by releasing
results gradually.
The opposition ratcheted
up the pressure early Monday when Movement for Democratic Change
Secretary-General Tendai Biti announced that the opposition had
photographed the final counts posted at about 4,000 of the 8,000
polling stations as evidence to prove election fraud if necessary.
He said Tsvangirai won
58% of the vote compared with 37% for Mugabe, and 96 of 128 parliament
seats thus far counted.
"The worst case
scenario is a runoff. The worst case scenario is not a ZANU-PF victory.
That's not possible," Biti said. "Unlike previous elections,
no one can privatize the result because it is posted outside the
polling stations. It is extremely difficult to steal an election
when the results are posted."
Zimbabwe Election Commission
results showed losses for Mugabe's party in rural areas and the
defeat of two ministers, including Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa.
One Western diplomat
said the ruling party had suffered shocking losses. "They have
effectively been wiped out in large parts of their heartland. They're
in shock. They have no idea what to do about it."
Other Western diplomats
were convinced Mugabe would cling to power despite what they said
was the clear evidence that he had lost.
"Mugabe does not
know the game is up. He's prepared to take the country down with
him," one said. "But even if Mugabe steals the election,
he misses the point. This is not just a rough patch. This has been
seismic. The country has rejected him."
robyn.dixon@latimes.com
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