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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
opposition offices raided
Angus Shaw, Associated Press
April 03, 2008
View article
on the Associated Press website
President Robert Mugabe's government raided the offices of the main
opposition movement and rounded up foreign journalists Thursday
in an ominous indication that he may use intimidation and violence
to keep his grip on power.
Police raided
a hotel used by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and
ransacked some of the rooms. Riot police also surrounded another
hotel housing foreign journalists and took away several of them,
according to a man who answered the phone there.
"Mugabe
has started a crackdown," Movement for Democratic Change general
secretary Tendai Biti told The Associated Press. "It is quite
clear he has unleashed a war."
Biti said the
raid at the Meikles Hotel targeted "certain people ... including
myself." Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai was "safe"
but had canceled plans for a news conference, Biti said.
He said that
Thursday's clampdown was a sign of worse to follow but that the
opposition would not go into hiding.
"You can't
hide away from fascism. Zimbabwe is a small country. So we are not
going into hiding. We are just going to have to be extra cautious,"
he said.
Committee to
Protect Journalists Executive Director Joel Simon said the group
was alarmed by the reports Thursday. "In light of the political
situation, it is imperative that all journalists, foreign and domestic,
be allowed to work freely," he said.
While the election
commission has issued results for the parliamentary races held Saturday
alongside the presidential race, it has yet to release any presidential
count. A presidential candidate needs at least 50 percent plus one
vote to avoid a runoff, which would have to be held within 21 days
of the first round.
The opposition
says that Tsvangirai won the presidential race outright, but says
it is would take part in a runoff.
Mugabe's Deputy
Information Minister Bright Matonga said Thursday that Mugabe was
ready for a runoff, dashing hopes that he would bow quietly off
the national stage he has dominated for 28 years.
"President
Mugabe is going to fight. He is not going anywhere. He has not lost,"
Matonga said on the British Broadcasting Corp. "We are going
to go hard and fight and get the majority required."
The 84-year-old
Mugabe was shown on state television Thursday meeting African Union
election observers, his first public appearance since the elections.
Matonga accused
the opposition of trying "to get rid of President Mugabe at
all costs and that is what we are going to fight."
"This election
campaign was not a campaign for democracy but a campaign for regime
change," he said, going on to say that the opposition was sponsored
by the West. He said ZANU-PF would go back and "regroup"
and campaign "very vigorously in "a very peaceful manner."
International
concern mounted about the continuing delays.
"We still
have not seen the important thing, which is real live election results,"
said State Department spokesman Tom Casey. "We need to see
an official tally, see it soon and have assurances made that this
is actually a correct counting of the votes."
"Delays
raise serious questions in our minds about what is going on in the
vote counting," he said.
Former U.N.
chief Kofi Annan said the continuing delays were dangerous. He urged
the government and the electoral commission to scrupulously observe
the electoral law and "to declare the election results faithfully
and accurately."
"We live
in an open world today and indeed the eyes of the world are on Zimbabwe,
on its Electoral Commission, on its President. I urge them to do
the right thing, to respect the Constitution
and to obey the electoral laws. The election results should be released
now," he said.
Mugabe has ruled
since his guerrilla army helped force an end to white minority rule
in then-Rhodesia and bring about an independent Zimbabwe in 1980.
He ordered the
often-violent seizures of white-owned commercial farms, ostensibly
to return them to the landless black majority. Instead, Mugabe replaced
a white elite with a black one, giving the farms to relatives, friends
and cronies who allowed cultivated fields to be taken over by weeds.
Today, a third
of the population depends on imported food handouts. Another third
has fled the country and 80 percent is jobless. Inflation is the
highest in the world at more than 100,000 percent and people suffer
crippling shortages of food, water, electricity, fuel and medicine.
Life expectancy has fallen from 60 to 35 years.
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