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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Opposition
fury as results give Mugabe second chance at victory
Catherine Philp, The Times (UK)
May 03, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3862338.ece
"How
can you have a run-off when Mugabe has been unleashing violence,
death squads and violence against our structures"
Zimbabwe's
opposition rejected as "scandalous" official results
that would force a run-off in the presidential election, but offered
yesterday to share power with the ruling Zanu PF party in a coalition
excluding Robert Mugabe. The results, which have been delayed for
nearly five weeks, were given to party officials for the first time
as they met in Harare to verify the figures. They show that Morgan
Tsvangirai, the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change party
(MDC), has won but not with the majority required to avoid a second
round between the leading candidates. According to officials, the
election commission's tally awarded Mr Tsvangirai 47.9 per
cent of the vote and President Mugabe 43.2 per cent. The figures
matched those leaked by senior government officials earlier in the
week, indicating their acceptance by the ruling party. Yesterday
they announced that Mr Mugabe planned to contest the run-off.
The MDC, however,
sticks by its tally of 50.3 per cent, enough to hand outright victory
to Mr Tsvangirai and bring to an end nearly three decades of rule
by Mr Mugabe. "Morgan Tsvangirai should be allowed to form
a government of national healing that includes all Zimbabwean stakeholders,"
said Tendai Biti, the MDC's deputy leader. It could include
members of Zanu PF, but not its leader, he added. "The only
condition we give . . . is that President Mugabe must immediately
concede," Mr Biti said. Under the verification process the
candidates' representatives must compare the official results
with those they have compiled. In the polls on March 29, results
from each polling station were published outside, allowing all parties
to collect the same data.
Despite pressure
from the election commission to sign off the results, opposition
officials said that they would first resolve the discrepancies in
the counts. "It appears the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
is determined to announce its result but certainly it will be rejected
by us," Chris Mbanga, the electoral representative for Mr
Tsvangirai, told reporters during a break in the verification meeting.
The Mugabe regime, apparently stunned by its first loss of parliamentary
control, has sought to buy time to explore its options of how to
stay in power. These have included the prospect of a run-off and
the campaign of violence against the opposition. In another stalling
tactic, Zanu PF mounted a legal challenge yesterday in 52 Parliamentary
constituencies where it was defeated. The authorities earlier ordered
a recount in 23 constituencies but opposition victories were confirmed
in nearly all of them.
Mr Tsvangirai
has been out of Zimbabwe since the week after the elections to lobby
for regional support but also because of fears that he would be
a victim of the anti-opposition campaign. The MDC says that at least
20 of its workers and supporters have been killed in the violence
carried out by members of the Zanu PF youth militia, war veterans
and uniformed security personnel. Mr Tsvangirai wants UN supervision
of another poll if he is to take part. He said in a television interview
in South Africa: "How can you have a run-off when Mugabe over
the last month has been unleashing violence, death squads and violence
against our structures and decimating our electoral structures on
the ground?"
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