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59
protestors beaten up, 11 arrested
IRIN News
May 05, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78056
More than 50
protesting Zimbabweans were beaten up and 11 members of the activist
organization, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), were arrested in the country's second
city, Bulawayo, on 5
May, according to a WOZA official.
"We demonstrated
ahead of Mothers Day to call for an end to political violence,"
WOZA National Coordinator Jenni Williams told IRIN. "Riot police
came upon us indiscriminately - the driver of the police vehicle
just drove into the crowd," Williams alleged. "Others
were injured by police, who beat them with batons."
Williams said the raid
was extremely chaotic. She alleged that police beat her into a police
vehicle, then demanded what she was doing in the vehicle and beat
her out again. According to WOZA, the 59 injured people were receiving
care at a private clinic, but the whereabouts of the 11 people who
were arrested was yet to be established.
A police spokesman in
Bulawayo said they were unable to confirm the arrests and referred
IRIN to the national police headquarters in the capital, Harare.
Despite repeated attempts, IRIN was unable to contact the police
in Harare.
Election
results
Williams
said: "We are calling on the Chief Election Officer to declare
[leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Morgan]
Tsvangirai the winner. We believe the results [released last week]
were rigged; we don't believe them."
According to the results
declared by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), none of the
presidential candidates managed to get the required majority of
50 percent plus one: Tsvangirai received 47.9 percent, while President
Robert Mugabe polled 43.2 percent.
"No candidate received
a majority of the total number of votes cast, which means a second
election shall be held on a date to be advised by the ZEC,"
said Lovemore Sekeramayi, ZEC election officer for the presidential
ballot.
"According
to the Electoral
Act, the two candidates who received the highest and next highest
numbers of valid votes cast shall be eligible to contest in the
second election. Accordingly, Tsvangirai and Mugabe are eligible
to contest in the second election."
While the Electoral Act
states that a presidential election re-run has to be held within
21 days of the results being announced, the ZEC has been vague about
when the run-off will be held, keeping Zimbabweans on tenterhooks.
ZEC chairperson George
Chiweshe told the media at the weekend that the ZEC board would
meet "as soon as possible" to discuss the date for the
run-off, and the logistical arrangements for holding another election
- an expense the impoverished state can ill afford.
ZANU-PF, which lost its
parliamentary majority for the first time since Zimbabwe gained
independence in 1980, has announced that it is already preparing
for a run-off. According to MDC vice-president Thokozani Khupe,
the party's hand is being forced to participate in a second presidential
election.
Late on 5 May, MDC officials
were locked in a meeting to consider lodging an application in the
High Court in Harare to get the ZEC to verify the results, which
might yet make a presidential run-off unnecessary.
Luke Tamborinyoka, the
MDC director of information, told IRIN: "One of the conditions
that we would propose in the event of a run-off is that the election
will have to be supervised by the United Nations, the African Union
and the Southern African Development Community."
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