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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SADC
to double observers for Zim poll
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
June 04, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=341145&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
The Southern African
Development Community (SADC) is to send up to 400 observers to this
month's run-off poll in Zimbabwe, double the number who oversaw
the first round, a top official was quoted as saying on Wednesday.
"We are expecting
between 300 and 400 election observers to cover the entire country,"
Colonel Thanki Mothae, director of the SADC secretariat on politics,
defence and security, told Zimbabwe's state-run Herald newspaper.
"It was felt that
we need more observers so we had to increase from the 163 we had
in March."
Mothae told the newspaper
that observers from the 14-nation bloc would start arriving in Harare
this weekend with the bulk arriving next week.
Zimbabweans go to the
polls on June 27 for a run-off vote between veteran President Robert
Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) after they fought an inconclusive first round in March.
The March 29 elections
also saw Mugabe's ruling party lose its traditional parliamentary
majority for the first time since independence 28 years ago.
The aftermath of the
elections has been marred by a wave of politically-motivated violence,
mostly in rural areas, with the MDC claiming at least 54 of its
supporters have been killed and 25 000 displaced in retributive
attacks by ruling party militias.
South African President
Thabo Mbeki, the region's chief mediator on Zimbabwe, said in a
television interview last week that SADC was increasing the number
of observers "so that they can cover all parts of Zimbabwe"
adding that "they need to go in as early as possible".
Tsvangirai, who claimed
he won the presidential election in March without the need for a
run-off, agreed to participate on condition that regional and international
observers were allowed in without restrictions.
A SADC mission which
oversaw the first round of voting was heavily criticised by the
opposition after it gave the vote a largely clean bill of health
before any of the results had been announced.
Mugabe
snubs Ban Ki-moon
Meanwhile, Mugabe snubbed a request on Tuesday by United Nations
chief Ban Ki-moon to send a special envoy to check on security in
the build-up to the vote.
Ban made the request
at a meeting with Mugabe on the sidelines of an ongoing UN food
summit in Rome, ZTV reported, but the Zimbabwean leader told him
that concerns about security ahead of the June 27 presidential vote
were misplaced.
Mugabe told Ban that
he had been overly influenced by Western countries hostile to Zimbabwe
and been "completely blind" to the impact of sanctions
imposed by the European Union and United States, the report added.
Violence has been steadily
mounting in the approach to the run-off.
Mugabe is usually barred
from the European Union as part of a package of sanctions imposed
after he allegedly rigged his 2002 re-election.
However he was able to
attend the ongoing Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) summit
in the Italian capital as it is being staged by the UN.
In his speech at the
FAO summit on Tuesday, Mugabe accused the West of trying to "cripple"
Zimbabwe's economy and "effect illegal regime change".
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