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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
poll body says "dangerous" to issue result
Muchena Zigomo, Reuters
April 09, 2008
http://africa.reuters.com/country/ZW/news/usnL09588864.html
A lawyer for Zimbabwe's
electoral commission said on Wednesday it would be "dangerous"
for the High Court to order the release of presidential election
results, as demanded by the opposition MDC.
The Movement
for Democratic Change has gone
to court to try to force out the result of the March 29 vote,
saying its leader Morgan Tsvangirai has won and should be declared
president, ending the 28-year rule of President Robert Mugabe.
Mugabe is trying to delay
the result announcement, pending a recount, to give him time to
prepare for a probable runoff against Tsvangirai. George Chikumbirike,
a lawyer for the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, told judge Tendai
Uchena: "It would be dangerous in my view to give an order
because it might not be complied with ... because of outside exigencies
which the party (ZEC) will be unable to control."
He did not elaborate
but appeared to be referring to rising tension in Zimbabwe because
of the post-election impasse.
Chikumbirike also declined
to say how far the ZEC had gone in preparing to announce the result,
saying this was privileged information which "the commission
has entitlement to release when it's ready".
Jacob Zuma, leader of
the ruling party in Zimbabwe's powerful neighbour South Africa,
earlier joined a chorus of demands for the release of the results.
The MDC says Mugabe,
accused by critics of ruining his once prosperous country, has unleashed
a wave of violence against the opposition since the election and
called on African nations to intervene to prevent further bloodshed.
Zuma, who rivals President
Thabo Mbeki as the most powerful man in South Africa and is the
frontrunner to succeed him in 2009, told the Star newspaper: "I
think the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission should have announced results
by now."
Western powers led by
former colonial ruler Britain and the United States have been calling
for the result since last week but South Africa has much greater
influence as the regional power that has tried to mediate in the
Zimbabwe crisis.
Suspense
"It is not a good
thing to keep the nation in suspense. Now the Zimbabwean elections
have become an international issue. We all expected that once the
elections were finished, results would be announced. Now there are
suspicions from the people," said Zuma, who met Tsvangirai
earlier this week.
His remarks opened a
gap with Mbeki who has consistently called for "quiet diplomacy"
in Zimbabwe and led unsuccessful mediation last year by the regional
body SADC.
Zuma ousted Mbeki as
party leader in December and has gradually begun to eclipse him
since then.
The third candidate in
the presidential election, ruling party defector Simba Makoni, also
called for the results to be released.
"We don't know what
is going on, but the results must be released without any further
delay," said Makoni, a former finance minister.
He said his officials
had been denied access to the vote counting centre and the delay
was causing national tension.
(Additional reporting
by MacDonald Dzirutwe, Cris Chinaka, Stella Mapenzauswa, Nelson
Banya and Marius Bosch; Writing by Barry Moody; Editing by Matthew
Tostevin)
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