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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
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Zimbabwe
opposition repeats 'no' to any presidential runoff
Donna Bryson,
Associated Press
May 01, 2008
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jaGkiD_oeuNCWUEr7YyXikc7dKZQD90CFAB00
Johannesburg - Zimbabwe's
opposition rejected a presidential runoff election despite a media
report Wednesday saying the long-delayed official tally delivered
them a victory short of an outright win. CNN quoted an unidentified
senior official with Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu PF party as saying results
from the March 29 election gave opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
47 percent of the votes while President Robert Mugabe trailed with
43 percent. The CNN source said the results meant a second round
of voting was necessary, since Zimbabwe's law requires a candidate
to win 50 percent plus one vote to avoid a runoff. In Johannesburg,
opposition spokesman George Sibotshiwe said he had heard reports
that senior Zimbabwean government officials were saying official
results put Tsvangirai ahead by a slim margin. Sibotshiwe reiterated
that the opposition would not take part in a runoff because it believed
only fraudulent results would deny Tsvangirai an outright victory.
"If Robert Mugabe cannot accept the real results now, what's
the guarantee he'll accept the real results after a runoff?"
Sibotshiwe asked.
Liberia's president called
on her fellow African leaders Wednesday to ensure the results reflect
the will of Zimbabweans, warning of the danger of the country's
conflict spilling over into its neighbors in southern Africa. Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf recalled that her nation's back-to-back civil wars
in 1989-2003 left 200,000 people dead in "a tragedy rooted
in suppression of the will of the people and the choice of the people.
So I'm one of those African leaders who say to our other leaders
and our colleagues, it's time to do something about Zimbabwe,"
Sirleaf said in New York. Tsvangirai says he won the presidency
outright, while independent observers have been saying that he only
won the most votes and not the needed 50 percent plus one vote.
In Zimbabwe's capital, electoral commission officials said that
no results had been released and that party officials would not
see them until a verification process set to start Thursday afternoon.
Sibotshiwe said the report
a runoff would be necessary was part of a government strategy to
gear expectations of the need for a second round of voting that
Mugabe would engineer in his favor. The opposition says a campaign
of terror and violence since the first round of voting has left
it in disarray, with its main leaders staying out of the country
in fear of arrest. Independent rights groups also say post- election
violence makes it unlikely a runoff could be free and fair. Tiseke
Kasambala, a Human Rights Watch researcher who was recently in Zimbabwe,
said even without the violence, the government's handling of the
first round, including the long delay in releasing presidential
results, raises questions about whether any runoff can be valid.
Kasambala, who returned Monday from two weeks in Zimbabwe, accused
Mugabe's authoritarian regime of unleashing the army and ruling-party
militants on dissenters, reserving the worst violence for those
seen as betraying the man who has been president for nearly three
decades.
The violence "is
a form of punishment of people who turned against the ruling party,"
Kasambala told reporters in Johannesburg. "The government is
actually focusing on its strongholds and some of the areas it thinks
it should have won." She also said that in the past four days,
Human Rights Watch received reports that more than 100 polling station
officers - most of them teachers and low-ranking civil servants
- had been detained in an eastern province. She called that another
indication the government and its loyalists are targeting those
seen as betraying Mugabe. Mugabe's administration contends opposition
groups are responsible for the violence. Attempts to reach Zimbabwean
officials for comment Wednesday were not successful. In Washington,
the Senate passed a non-binding resolution late Tuesday calling
on Mugabe to step aside and begin a peaceful transition to democratic
rule.
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