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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
African
observers report 'horrendous' political violence in Zimbabwe
Angus Shaw, Associated Press
June 18, 2008
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=18996
Harare - Election
observers from across Africa have heard "horrendous" accounts
of political violence in Zimbabwe, their spokesperson has said,
singling out President Robert Mugabe for criticism. Marwick Khumalo,
head of a 64-member Pan-African Parliament observer mission, said
his team had spent several days investigating reports of election
violence. His is among the first observer missions at work for a
June 27 presidential run-off between Mugabe and opposition MDC leader
Morgan Tsvangirai. Independent human rights observers say Mugabe's
police, soldiers and party militants have orchestrated widespread
violence aimed at ensuring Mugabe wins after coming second to Tsvangirai
in March. In recent days, Mugabe has turned up the rhetoric, saying
he would go to war before accepting defeat at the polls. "Beating
the drums of war is not acceptable in any situation," Khumalo
said. He said his observers had seen the grave of a woman "who
was chopped up". Other independent observers said the woman
had been the wife of an opposition leader and died at the hands
of supporters of Mugabe. "We have heard so many horrendous
stories," Khumalo said.
Mugabe, campaigning
in the central Kadoma district, accused Tsvangirai and other leaders
of the MDC of orchestrating violence. He said opposition leaders
faced arrest. Independent observers have noted some retaliatory
attacks, but say the opposition violence does not approach the state-sponsored
violence in scale. In South Africa, the Nelson Mandela Foundation
has joined leaders and groups across Africa calling "for an
end to the violence and intimidation, and the restoration of full
access for humanitarian and aid agencies". Anglican Archbishop
Emeritus Desmond Tutu and former United Nations secretary-general
Kofi Annan are among those who have signed the call. Kenyan Prime
Minister Raila Odinga, in speaking to reporters in Washington yesterday,
urged world leaders to put pressure on Mugabe to step down. He described
the run-off as a "complete sham" and Zimbabwe as "an
eyesore, an embarrassment to the African continent". Mugabe
aide Emmerson Mnangagwa, visiting Maputo yesterday, was asked by
reporters about Mugabe's recent comments suggesting he would not
accept defeat. "The election will dictate" who governed
said Mnangagwa. "We are going to accept the outcome of the
results."
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