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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Three
weeks after polls, Zimbabwe holds recount
Agence
France-Presse (AFP)
April 19, 2008
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iuleQs-Hteteq3WhA4Vm0nwTPHHA
Murombedzi -
Zimbabwe held a partial recount Saturday of votes from last month's
general election as the opposition accused President Robert Mugabe
and his party of trying to rig their way back to power.
The recounts in 23 of
the 210 constituencies come amid rising tension and accusations
of violence, with a leading human rights group charging that Mugabe
followers were now rounding up opposition supporters and assaulting
them in torture camps.
Initial results gave
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change control of parliament
in the March 29 polls but the recount could end up with Mugabe's
Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) party
regaining its majority.
There was still no word
Saturday on the outcome of a simultaneous presidential ballot although
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai has claimed victory, ending Mugabe's
28 years at the helm.
"We expect them
to complete the recount within the next three to four days,"
electoral commission chairman George Chiweshe told AFP as his staff
began sifting through ballot papers at a snail's pace.
Chiweshe ordered the
recount after ZANU-PF complained about a string of irregularities
in the constituencies.
After the opposition
failed in a legal bid Friday to halt the process, electoral commission
officials began recounting on Saturday morning in each of the constituencies
in the presence of party agents and foreign monitors.
The MDC, which was declared
to have taken 109 seats against 97 for ZANU-PF, has long regarded
the nominally independent commission as a pro-government body and
sees the recount as a ploy to steal back control of parliament.
"We will not recognise
the outcome of the so-called recount," chief party spokesman
Nelson Chamisa told AFP.
"That's an illegal
process ... it is their own rigging process."
However Ignatius Chombo,
the current minister for local government whose constituency of
Zvimba North was one of the 23 under review, said "the recount
is a just and fair way to conclude the matter".
"So if we win, we
win properly and if we are going to lose we want to lose properly,"
he told AFP in the town of Murombedzi where his recount was being
conducted.
On the delayed presidential
poll results, Chombo said the electoral process should be viewed
as a whole, including the recount.
"I don't see what
the hullabaloo is all about. People should wait patiently until
the process is completely finished. A democratic and good process
will take its time," he said.
The recount has helped
further dampen expectations among Zimbabweans that they will learn
about the election outcome anytime soon.
"The election results
are dead and buried, I would rather wait for another five years
so I can vote in another election," said a Harare hotel worker.
The lack of results from
the presidential election has not prevented ZANU-PF from declaring
there will be a run-off and backing Mugabe as its candidate.
Tsvangirai has warned
that ZANU-PF is arming itself for a "war" against the
people in the aftermath of the elections, pointing to a shipment
of weapons from China destined for Zimbabwe on board a vessel which
had been anchored near the South African port of Durban.
After a high court judge
on Friday refused permission for the weapons to be transported across
the country to Zimbabwe, the ship sailed out of Durban for an unknown
destination.
In a report on Saturday,
the New York-based Human Rights Watch said ZANU-PF had established
a network of informal detention centres to beat, torture, and intimidate
opposition activists and ordinary Zimbabweans.
"Torture and violence
are surging in Zimbabwe," said the organisation's Africa director
Georgette Gagnon.
"ZANU-PF members
are setting up torture camps to systematically target, beat, and
torture people suspected of having voted for the MDC in last month's
elections."
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