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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Policeman
saw recruits being used to rig Zimbabwe votes for Robert Mugabe
Peta Thornycroft, The Telegraph (UK)
April 11, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/04/11/wzim111.xml
The first solid evidence
of ballot rigging in Zimbabwe's presidential election emerged yesterday
when a senior policeman told The Daily Telegraph that officers marked
extra votes for President Robert Mugabe.
Almost two weeks after
polling day, the official result has still not been announced. Independent
monitors say that Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, came first.
But the regime's critics
believe that the Electoral Commission - chaired by George Chiweshe,
a judge and close ally of the president - will announce that Mr
Mugabe is leading, although probably falling below the 50 per cent
margin needed to avoid a second round.
The MDC said
last night that it would boycott a run-off in the presidential poll
if one was declared, adding that Mr Tsvangirai won with a share
"much higher" than the 50.3 per cent it claimed
last week.
The police officer, who
cannot be identified for fear of reprisals, saw a number of ballot
boxes carried into a room at police headquarters in Harare last
weekend, seven days after the election.
Five or six new recruits
from Morris Depot, all in uniform, then filled out extra votes for
Mr Mugabe. Ballots for Mr Tsvangirai were removed, the officer added,
to bolster the president's share of the vote.
"We were in the
corridor and saw the ballot boxes being taken into Room 96,"
the officer said. The police headquaters is only about 300 yards
from Mr Mugabe's office in Harare. "We asked somebody who went
in there and saw the trainees filling out the ballot papers. I am
not the only one who knows this, there are others. The recruits
will do anything they are asked to do. They were all desperate for
jobs. If they have to beat people they will do that."
The officer
said that senior police commanders were desperate for 84-year-old
Mr Mugabe to hold power to protect their own interests. The force,
he added, was "very, very corrupt because surely we cannot
survive on what we earn". Despite recent salary rises, policemen
earn only GBP 10 a week, before tax.
Shortly before the election,
the ruling Zanu-PF regime changed the rules to allow police to "assist
voters" inside polling stations. The police were also responsible
for transmitting the presidential results to the Electoral Commission's
"command centre" in Harare.
Tendai Biti, the secretary-general
of the MDC, said the party had evidence of nine million ballot papers
being printed before the election, despite Zimbabwe's registered
electorate of only 5.9 million.
Figures from the parliamentary
election, held on the same day as the presidential poll, show that
some 2.5 million people voted.
Mr Biti said:
"They want to re-engineer the results. They have re-stuffed
these ballot boxes. An illegitmate government is in place. The failure
of the regime in Harare to give in to those who were elected in
our view constitutes a constitutional coup
d'etat."
The election crisis will
be the subject of an emergency summit of southern African countries
in Zambia's capital, Lusaka, tomorrow. Both Mr Mugabe and Mr Tsvangirai
could attend, raising the possibility of a public row.
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