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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Mugabe's
party expects to fight runoff
Cris Chinaka, Reuters
April 04, 2008
http://africa.reuters.com/top/news/usnBAN422289.html
The leadership
of Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party met on Friday to decide whether
President Robert Mugabe should contest a runoff vote against opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Mugabe convened
his politburo after the party lost control of parliament for the
first time in 28 years, in the biggest setback of his rule.
A ZANU-PF official
told Reuters the meeting was expected to agree he would fight to
retain power in a runoff.
There is increasing
impatience in Zimbabwe at a six-day wait for the results of the
presidential election, which Tsvangirai's MDC said he won outright
but which ZANU-PF and independent projections indicate will require
a second round.
The MDC said
it would ask the High Court to order the immediate release of the
results. It believes the delay masks attempts by Mugabe to engineer
a way out of the crisis.
Mugabe faces
deep discontent as Zimbabwe suffers the world's highest inflation
rate of more than 100,000 percent, a virtually worthless currency
and severe food and fuel shortages.
Referring to
the politburo meeting, a senior party member told Reuters: "I
have no doubt the resolution will be in favour of a run-off, I have
no doubt about that.
"We cannot
just hand it to Morgan (Tsvangirai) on a silver platter. We will
fight for it and we will win."
The opposition
says its tallies show Tsvangirai won an absolute majority and should
be declared president immediately.
Amid rumours
that security forces planned to crackdown on the opposition, Tsvangirai
spokesman George Sibotshiwe denied the MDC leader had gone into
hiding.
"He had
a meeting with diplomats today and he is in his offices. He has
no reason to hide."
Senate results,
which must precede the presidential outcome, only began trickling
out on Thursday night.
Buy
time
A
runoff should be held on April 19, three weeks after the elections,
but civil society groups said Mugabe plans to extend that to 90
days to buy time to regroup.
A statement
by civil society organisations in Harare said they had "reliable
knowledge" that Mugabe intended to extend the interval before
a runoff "using disputed and autocratic presidential powers".
The statement
read by human rights lawyer Lovemore Madhuku expressed "gravest
concern at the unacceptable delay in the release of poll results".
MDC spokesman
Nelson Chamisa told Reuters: "I am not aware of such a plan
but no matter how much they may want to buy time or beat up people
or employ other dirty tricks, the people of Zimbabwe have already
made a choice by voting for a candidate (Tsvangirai) that will take
the country forward."
Analysts believe
Mugabe would try to ensure victory in the second vote by using militias
and powerful security forces to cow MDC supporters in the interval
before the runoff.
Riot police
patrols were out in central Harare on Friday and two foreign journalists
were arrested on Thursday night for reporting the elections without
accreditation.
The White House
said it was "troubled" by the arrests and called for a
swift resolution of the post-election situation.
"We're
troubled by the reports we're hearing on the ground," White
House spokesman Gordon Johndroe told reporters at the NATO summit
in Bucharest. "Journalists and NGOs should be permitted to
go about their business."
The European
Union called on electoral authorities to release the results as
soon as possible and protested over the arrest of journalists.
Madhuku, of
rights group National
Constitutional Assembly, denied reports that the law requires
the electoral commission to issue presidential election results
by today.
"There
is no law that says you have to announce the presidential result,
or any results, within a certain period. There is no limit,"
he said.
"The bottom
line is that ZANU-PF does not want to, and will not hand power to
the MDC".
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