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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe
loses Zimbabwe majority
Al Jazeera
April 02, 2008
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F6DE4382-13F6-48B8-BEDD-A6B698A45073.htm
The Zimbabwe African
National Union - Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF), led by Robert Mugabe,
the president, has lost control of parliament in weekend elections,
official results show.
Hours after the opposition claimed victory in simultaneous presidential
poll, the electoral commission gave the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) 105 seats to 93 for Mugabe's Zanu-PF in the 210-seat
parliament.
Though some more results are still awaited, Zanu-PF will not have
the majority even if it wins all the remaining seats.
According to official
results, seven of Mugabe's cabinet ministers have lost their seats.
Victory
claim
At
a news conference earlier on Wednesday, the MDC declared Morgan
Tsvangirai, its leader, the rightful winner of the presidential
election, based on its own tally of the weekend polls.
Tendai Biti, the MDC secretary-general, said that Tsvangirai had
won 50.3 per cent against Mugabe's 43.8 per cent.
"That means he [Tsvangirai] is above the 50 per cent threshold
needed to avoid a run-off," Biti told reporters.
The MDC urged Mugabe
to concede defeat and avoid embarrassment.
"Put simply he has
won this election ... Morgan Richard Tsvangirai is the next president
of the Republic of Zimbabwe, without a run-off."
Biti, however, said:
"The state media has already begun to prepare the people for
a run-off in 21 days."
"If that is the
position this party will contest the run-off."
Claim
criticised
But the government was quick in condemning the claim, saying the
opposition should have waited for the official outcome.
Ndlovu Sikhanyiso,
the information minister, slammed the MDC for jumping the gun.
"Why rush to announce
the results before the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission finishes?"
he said.
"What if the final
results are contrary to what they claim? Let's let the electoral
commission complete its job then we can start talking from there."
Bright Matonga, the deputy
information minister, also criticised the announcement.
"If the MDC thinks
they have won, why don't they wait. What is urgent?" he told
BBC news.
"Let it come from
official sources."
George Charamba, Zanu
PF presidential spokesman, told Al Jazeera: "They [the opposition]
are trying to rig the elections. It's calibrated in such a
way that they just get over the half, that is required and one can
see that they are anxious for the results."
"I think its both,
the number has a bearing on what they are doing by way of breaking
the law, to the extent that Tsvangirai was flanked by a lawyer.
He surely got good advice. There is a standard pattern for persons
who break the law, the law will take its course and I can assure
you that there will be reactions."
Rigging
fears
Counting of votes has progressed at a snail's pace, raising fears
of rigging and fraud.
The MDC has consistently
questioned the impartiality of the commission, a theoretically independent
body whose leadership was appointed by Mugabe.
The commission has been
under growing pressure, including from foreign governments to declare
the official results, with the opposition charging that the hold-up
is designed to buy time for Mugabe to fix the outcome.
The commission has said
the hold-up is down to the complex nature of the polls, the first
time that the contest for president and parliament has been held
at the same time.
Mugabe, who has ruled
the former British colony since independence in 1980, said before
the election that his old rival Tsvangirai would never rule the
country in his lifetime.
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