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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
court to rule on election results
Cris Chinaka, Reuters
April 06, 2008
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL0457212820080406
A Zimbabwe court will
rule on Monday on whether it has the authority to order the release
of delayed presidential election results which Robert Mugabe's opponents
say will show his long grip on power is over.
No results have emerged
from the presidential vote nine days ago and Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF
wants the electoral commission to delay announcing the outcome pending
a recount.
The Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) opposition says Mugabe wants the delay to help him
find a way to cling to power despite his people's rejection of him,
amid hyperinflation and economic collapse. It is asking the High
Court to force their release.
The MDC says
its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, has
already won and should be declared president, ending Mugabe's
uninterrupted 28-year rule since independence from Britain.
After a hearing lasting
almost four hours, High Court judge Tendai Uchena adjourned to consider
an electoral commission argument that he did not have jurisdiction.
Mugabe suffered his first
election defeat when ZANU-PF lost control of parliament in the March
29 elections.
ZANU-PF and independent
monitors' projections show Tsvangirai has won the presidential election
but will be forced into a runoff vote after failing to win an absolute
majority.
ZANU-PF's strategy to
stay in power includes legal challenges to some of the parliamentary
results and the mobilization of pro-government militias before any
runoff.
The re-emergence of war
veterans, who in recent years led a wave of violent occupations
of white farms as part of a government land redistribution programme,
increased fears Mugabe's supporters would try to intimidate opponents.
Responding to reports
of fresh farm invasions by the war veterans, Commercial Farmers'
Union (CFU) chief executive Hendrick Olivier said police had dispersed
groups of people "claiming to be war veterans ordering farmers
to vacate their farms" in Masvingo province.
"We have also received
similar reports from two farms in Centenary. Reports have also been
made to the police and we hope they will act as swiftly as they
did in Masvingo," he said.
Agricultural officials
say a majority of Zimbabwe's 4,500 or so white commercial farmers
have been forced off their properties since 2000 when Mugabe launched
his land reforms.
Analysts say the 600-700
remaining are spread across the country, but mostly in large-scale
cattle ranches and wildlife estates in Zimbabwe's southern Masvingo
and Matabeleland provinces.
Most evictions took place
in the grain- and tobacco- producing belt of Mashonaland.
The new invasions by
the war veterans are taking place in these areas, and in Masvingo
where the remaining white farmers are being accused of harboring
fellow whites who want to claim back their properties.
The state-run Herald
newspaper quoted Mugabe as saying Zimbabweans should protect their
land from former colonizers. It said he made the plea at the funeral
of a relative.
Electoral rules
say a runoff must be held three weeks after the release of results,
meaning the longer the delay the more time Mugabe has to regroup.
"War
on the people"
On Saturday, Tsvangirai
accused the 84-year-old former guerrilla leader of "preparing
a war on the people".
Zimbabwe state radio
reported the war veterans had threatened to occupy all white farms
in Masvingo Province after reports that their original owners were
returning to land seized by the government after 2000.
The state-owned Sunday
Mail said ZANU-PF had rejected an opposition offer to form a unity
government. The MDC said it had made no approaches to the ruling
party.
"That's nonsense.
That's absolutely nonsense, we won this election under extremely
difficult circumstances. The only thing that worries us is the violence
and the war that they have unleashed on the people of Zimbabwe,"
MDC spokesman Tendai Biti said.
Mugabe's government is
widely accused in the West of stealing previous presidential and
parliamentary elections, and his removal is regarded by Washington
and London as necessary to rebuilding Zimbabwe's shattered economy.
Zimbabweans are struggling
with inflation of more than 100,000 percent -- the highest in the
world -- mass unemployment and shortages of meat, bread, fuel and
other necessities.
(Additional reporting
by Nelson Banya, Cris Chinaka, Stella Mapenzauswa and MacDonald
Dzirutwe; writing by Marius Bosch; editing by Michael Georgy)
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