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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
recount is fixed, says opposition
Chris
McGreal, The Guardian (UK)
April 20, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/apr/20/zimbabwe
Zimbabwe's opposition
alleged widespread irregularities as the partial recount begun yesterday
of votes cast in the presidential and parliamentary elections held
three weeks ago, including ballot boxes with seals broken before
they were delivered for the count or with no seals at all. The Movement
for Democratic Change said some boxes had been stuffed with votes
for President Robert Mugabe and his Zanu PF in an effort to overturn
the opposition's capture of a parliamentary majority for the first
time since independence 28 years ago. 'This is a discount of the
people's will in the guise of a recount,' said the MDC's spokesman,
Nelson Chamisa. 'We have found ballot boxes already open or with
no seals. We believe other boxes they opened and forged new seals.
This is not an isolated problem." The recount, which state
radio said could take three days, came as the opposition presidential
candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, said he fears for his life if he returns
to Zimbabwe. Yesterday, Human Rights Watch accused Zanu PF of establishing
a network of torture camps in a campaign against Tsvangirai's supporters.
The recounts are taking place in 23 constituencies, all but one
lost by Zanu PF to the MDC. Mugabe's party will regain control if
the MDC's victories are reversed in nine or more seats. If Mugabe
retains power it would be important to him to also control parliament,
in part because if he retires before the next election his successor
as president for the remainder of the six-year term will be chosen
by MPs. The recount will also affect the outcome of the presidential
race, which Tsvangirai claims to have won with a little more than
50 percent of the vote based on the MDC's own tally of polling station
returns.
But if the official results
do not deliver an outright victory to either Mugabe or Tsvangirai
the law requires a run-off within three weeks. Tsvangirai has vacillated
over whether to participate in a second round, saying that a fair
election is not possible amid surging violence in rural areas. The
MDC leader, who has been touring southern Africa to drum up support,
has also expressed fears for his own safety and said he will remain
abroad for now. 'It is no use going back to Zimbabwe and becoming
captive. Then you are not effective. What can you do?' he told a
Canadian newspaper. 'Do you want a dead hero?'. The campaign of
violence, called Operation Makavhoterapapi ['Where did you put your
cross?'] by Zanu PF officials, has spread across regions where opposition
support surged in the election. HRW said it had collected evidence
from victims and witnesses of illegal detention centres in Mutoko,
Mudzi and Bikita 'to round up and instil fear in suspected political
opponents'. Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch,
said: 'Zanu PF members are setting up torture camps to systematically
target, beat and torture people suspected of having voted for the
MDC. Several individuals told HRW they had been held in these camps
for up to three days and interrogated about MDC leaders, MDC funding,
and the location of other MDC supporters.'
In a further sign that
support for Mugabe is eroding among regional leaders, Botswana's
foreign minister, Phandu Skelemani, took the unusual step of publicly
contradicting South Africa's President, Thabo Mbeki, who has said
there is 'no crisis' in Zimbabwe. Skelemani said Mbeki was alone
in that view at a regional summit last weekend. Former United Nations
secretary general Kofi Annan yesterday urged African leaders to
intervene urgently. 'The question that has been posed is where are
the Africans? Where are the leaders of the countries in the region,
what are they doing, how can they help the situation?' he said in
Nairobi. 'It is a serious crisis with impact beyond Zimbabwe.' There
were conflicting reports yesterday as to the destination of a Chinese
ship turned away from South Africa after dockers in Durban refused
to unload a cargo of weapons destined for Zimbabwe and a legal rights
group won a court order blocking the delivery. The An Yue Jiang
was at first reported by a human rights group to be headed for Mozambique
but was later said to be heading south, possibly destined for a
friendlier port in Namibia or Angola.
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