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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
NDI
condemns repression & calls for acceptance of election results
The
National Democratic Institute (NDI)
April 25, 2008
http://www.accessdemocracy.org/library/2303_zm_release_zesn_042508.pdf
The National
Democratic Institute (NDI) today condemned the brutal actions of
the Zimbabwe government and called on it to accept the results of
the March 29 elections.
"By refusing to release the results of the presidential poll
and engaging in violence and intimidation, the government is violating
the fundamental civil and political rights of the Zimbabwean people,"
said NDI President Kenneth Wollack.
"The government
should not operate on the assumption that it can act with impunity,"
he said. "It should know that the international community
is watching and prepared to take action."
NDI expressed
deep concern at the government's decision today to raid
the offices of the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) in Harare and detain its program
manager.
"This courageous
group played a historic role by its election monitoring efforts
and by accurately projecting the outcome of the presidential election
through data collection of actual polling site results," Wollack
said. That projection showed that the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, clearly won the popular vote.
"These activities by ZESN were consistent with Zimbabwean
laws and international standards for democratic elections,"
he said.
ZESN, an NDI partner
organization, is composed of 38 leading Zimbabwean civil society
groups. It is a non-partisan, non-governmental organization that
has conducted election observation in Zimbabwe since 2002.
For the March 29 election,
ZESN used information gathered by accredited observers from a random
representative sample of polling stations in all provinces of the
country. ZESN's results showed that opposition presidential
candidate Tsvangirai garnered 49.4 percent of the vote with a margin
of error that could have put him over the 50 percent plus one needed
for an outright victory. President Robert Mugabe received 41.8 percent,
according to ZESN. The official results have never been released.
Wollack noted that since
the election, the regime or its supporters have arrested, detained,
harassed and inflicted violence on opposition figures and supporters,
workers from non-governmental organizations from inside and outside
the country, journalists, and others who have committed no crime
and are operating within Zimbabwean law.
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