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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Police
block Zimbabwe opposition from filing suit to force release of vote
tallies
Angus Shaw, Associated Press
April 05, 2008
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/international/africa/view.bg?articleid=1085168
Armed police prevented
opposition lawyers from entering Zimbabwe's High Court on Saturday
to lodge an urgent suit Opposition lawyer Alec Muchadehama said
a senior police officer wearing a ruling Zanu-PF shirt gave the
orders, amid increasing signs of a clampdown.
"No one is going
to enter. They say they are going to call the riot police,"
Muchadehama said. Journalists waiting outside the court were also
ordered to disperse.
The Movement for Democratic
Change wanted the High Court to force the electoral commission to
publish results of the March 29 presidential election. Official
results for the parliamentary elections showed the ruling party
lost its majority in the 210-seat parliament. Independent observers
projected that MDC candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, won most of the
votes cast in the presidential contest but not enough for an outright
victory over longtime ruler Robert Mugabe.
The ruling ZANU-PF party
announced Friday it was endorsing Mugabe, whose 28-year rule led
Zimbabwe from liberation to ruin, in a runoff election.
Earlier, the opposition
asked the United Nations to intervene during the runoff campaign
over fears that Mugabe, 84, may stage a violent crackdown to retain
power.
Nelson Chamisa, spokesman
for the opposition, pointed to signs of a coming clampdown, including
a march in Harare by war veterans loyal to Mugabe who have beat
up opponents in the past; a raid on opposition party offices, and
the detention of foreign journalists by armed police in full riot
gear.
"They are trying
to intimidate people, they are trying to set up the context for
unleashing violence. The vampire instincts of this regime are definitely
going to come out," Chamisa charged.
Zimbabwe needs the assistance
of the international community, he said.
"The U.N. has to
make sure that there is no violence in this country. ... They should
not (wait to) come when there is blood in the street, blood in the
villages."
Mugabe has ruled since
his guerrilla army helped bring about an independent Zimbabwe in
1980. His popularity has been battered by an economic slide that
followed the often-violent seizures of white-owned commercial farms
since 2000. A third of the population have fled the country, 80
percent of those who remain are jobless and inflation is more than
100,000 percent. Chamisa said he expected the court to answer its
petition for the election results immediately in Saturday morning's
hearing, but he was not hopeful of the outcome.
Zimbabwe's courts are
stacked with Mugabe sympathizers who have delayed hearing opposition
challenges to results of 2002 and 2005 elections that international
observers said were marked by fraud and intimidation. The U.S. and
other Western nations also have been pressing for the presidential
results to be announced.
The law requires a runoff
within 21 days of the first elections. But diplomats in Harare and
at the United Nations said Mugabe was planning to declare a 90-day
delay to give security forces time to clamp down. An African Union
election observer team found no evidence of fraud during voting
last weekend, according to the delegation's leader, former Sierra
Leone president Ahmed Tejan Kabbah. Kabbah praised Mugabe as "a
patriot," and said during a meeting Thursday that the Zimbabwe
leader was "relaxed" despite his setback at the polls.
New York Times journalist Barry Bearak was among those detained
Thursday by heavily armed riot police who surrounded and entered
a Harare hotel frequented by foreign reporters, lawyers said. The
U.S.-based National Democratic Institute said one of its staff,
American Dileepan Sivapathasundaram, was detained at Harare's airport
as he tried to leave the country Thursday.
The government had rejected
most foreign journalists' applications to cover the elections and
had barred Western election observers.
Lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa
said the attorney general decided there was no case against the
two Americans and a third person who was not identified. However,
police decided to hold them. It was not clear whether new charges
would be filed.
State Department Tom
Casey said four Americans were detained Thursday, but two had been
released and were leaving the country. He said one of the two still
in custody was a reporter and had been seen by U.S. officials. The
other had not been located by U.S. officials, he said.
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