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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
opposition retains parliament control after recount
Angus Shaw,
Associated Press
April 27, 2008
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jaGkiD_oeuNCWUEr7YyXikc7dKZQD90A7O904
A recount of
disputed legislative seats has confirmed opposition control of parliament
and should be complete Monday, allowing the release of results from
last month's presidential election, state media reported.
The Sunday Mail newspaper,
a government mouthpiece, said the state Electoral Commission planned
to invite President Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
to a final "verification and collation exercise" on Monday.
The opposition and an
independent Zimbabwean observer group say that Tsvangirai won the
presidential race, and Mugabe has been accused of using delays,
fraud and violence to hold onto power.
On Sunday, Jendayi Frazer,
the top U.S. envoy for Africa called on the international community
to intervene.
"When a government
deploys its military, and its police, and its intelligence operatives,
as well as mobilizing youth militia, then the international community
has a responsibility to step in and to try to stop that government
from beating its own population," Frazer said in an interview
with The Associated Press in Zambia.
Frazer, assistant U.S.
secretary of state for African affairs, is touring the region to
press leaders to take a tougher stance against Mugabe.
Justice Minister Patrick
Chinamasa, a Mugabe loyalist, has criticized Frazer for her statements
earlier in the week backing claims that Tsvangirai beat Mugabe.
The Sunday Mail newspaper
said tallies from the presidential race would be scrutinized by
the candidates or their representatives before results are given.
Leaving room for a further
delay, election authorities agreed each party would collate its
own figures during the final verification stage, said Judge George
Chiweshe, head of the electoral commission.
Even if Mugabe retains
the presidency, he will have to deal with a defiant parliament.
The Sunday Mail said
the recount of 18 of 23 contested seats confirmed the initial results.
Even if the opposition lost the last five districts, it would still
hold the majority in parliament for the first time since independence
from Britain in 1980.
On Saturday, the electoral
commission confirmed the results in 10 disputed parliamentary votes:
six seats were taken by the opposition and four by Mugabe's ZANU-PF
party.
Tallies from the additional
eight recounted seats have not been released but Chiweshe told reporters
Saturday there were no significant differences between the two counts,
effectively confirming the opposition's control of the main 210-seat
House of Assembly.
Political tensions have
increased since security forces on Friday raided the offices of
the opposition and independent observers, seizing materials related
to the count.
Police confirmed
Saturday that they arrested 215 people in a raid on opposition headquarters
in Harare. They also said they searched the offices of the observer
group, the independent Zimbabwe
Election Support Network, looking for evidence that the Western-funded
organization bribed state election officials to rig polling results.
The opposition said those arrested were seeking refuge in the capital,
Harare, after being attacked by ruling party loyalists in the countryside.
*Associated Press Writer Joseph J. Schatz in Lusaka, Zambia
contributed to this report.
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