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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe
asks for recount as election stalemate deepens
Stella Mapenzauswa, Reuters
April 06, 2008
http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSL06137066
Zimbabwe sunk deeper
into political stalemate on Sunday, with the opposition going to
court to get election results released and President Robert Mugabe's
ruling party asking for a delay and recount.
Tensions between the
two sides have risen sharply since the elections last weekend, fueled
by opposition suspicions Mugabe's ZANU-PF is preparing to rig the
outcome of the hotly contested March 29 presidential poll.
The stakes were raised
on Saturday when Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic
Change, declared victory over Mugabe in the presidential race and
accused the veteran 84-year-old leader of "preparing a war
on the people".
Mugabe's supporters struck
back hours later when state media reported that ZANU-PF had asked
election officials to defer release of the presidential poll results
and conduct a recount and audit of all materials, including ballots,
used in it.
The ruling party cited
"revelations of errors and miscalculations" as the basis
for its request, according to a report in the state-run Sunday Mail.
The High Court in Harare
is scheduled on Sunday to hear Tsvangirai's application to have
the results issued immediately, His MDC supporters say they will
show the former union leader won an absolute majority of the votes.
Independent observers,
however, say the MDC leader outpolled Mugabe but did not win enough
votes to avoid a run-off.
Top ZANU-PF officials
have endorsed Mugabe for the second ballot, putting to rest speculation
that they might ask him to concede defeat.
A group of pro-Mugabe
liberation war fighters also have vowed to back him in his bid to
stay in power.
Zimbabwe state radio
reported on Saturday that the war veterans had threatened to occupy
all white-owned farms in Masvingo Province amid reports that white
farmers were returning to land seized by the government after
2000.
The re-emergence of the
war veterans, who led a wave of violent occupations of white farms
as part of the government land redistribution programme, raised
fears Mugabe's supporters would try to intimidate opponents ahead
of the run-off.
It is not clear when
the next vote would occur. Zimbabwean law requires that the run-off
be held within three weeks, but the ZANU-PF has hinted that the
timing might be changed.
The ruling party also
plans to challenge some of the results of the parliamentary election,
which showed it lost control of the lower house. Results from the
upper chamber have Mugabe's party winning half of the contested
seats.
In a separate article,
the Sunday Mail said ZANU-PF had rejected an opposition offer to
form a unity government.
"Approaches were
made by MDC-Tsvangirai to form a government of national unity. Although
it is unclear in what capacity the emissaries came, ZANU-PF rejected
the approaches, and this was communicated to the MDC," it said
quoting ZANU-PF member and Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa.
Former colonial ruler
Britain and the United States, both of whom have applied sanctions
on Mugabe and his top officials, have criticised the election delay
and suggested it could be the precursor to a rigged result.
Mugabe's government is
widely accused in the West of stealing previous presidential and
parliamentary elections, and his removal is seen 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 chronic shortages of meat, bread,
fuel and other basic necessities.
(Additional reporting
by Nelson Banya, Cris Chinaka, Muchena Zigomo, MacDonald Dzirutwe;
Writing by Paul Simao; Editing by Dominic Evans)
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