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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
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ZANU
PF admits violence
Zimbabwe Metro
May 08, 2008
http://zimbabwemetro.com/2008/05/08/zanu-pf-admits-violence/
ZANU PF admitted on Thursday
to foreign observers that there has been violence against MDC supporters
and that government militias were instilling terror in the rural
areas.
As the opposition
alleged that 30 supporters had now been killed and a union leader
said 40 000 farmworkers
and their dependents had been made homeless, the authorities played
down the levels of violence.
Meanwhile, six days on
from the announcement of results from an inconclusive March 29 presidential
poll, there was still no word on when a second round should take
place nor whether the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) will participate.
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai,
who believes he secured an overall majority over veteran President
Robert Mugabe in the first round, has argued his rival is trying
to spread fear in the population to ensure his victory in the run-off.
In its latest toll, the
MDC said it now had information that 30 supporters had been killed
by Mugabe supporters in attacks in rural areas.
"What is worrying
is that each day comes with gory stories of how human beings are
being treated," said MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa.
"This is why we
are appealing on bended knees to the international community to
assist in ending the carnage."
In a press conference
in South Africa, the leader of a Zimbabwe farmworkers' union
said that 40 000 people had been driven off their land either as
a result of direct attacks by militias or through fear.
"Since the elections
we have recorded a total of 40 000 people who have been displaced,"
Gertrude Hambira, general secretary of the General Agriculture and
Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe, told reporters in Johannesburg.
"Our members and
their families have been left homeless. They have been attacked
by a group of militias wearing army uniforms.
"They have been
accused of voting for the opposition. Most of them are either on
the roadside or sheltering at some farms."
A number of human rights
groups, including the New York-based Human Rights Watch, have accused
security forces of complicity in attacks since the elections on
March 29 which have been concentrated in rural areas.
However the
army has disputed
the allegations, with a spokesperson saying earlier this week
that it "categorically distances itself and any of its members
from such activities".
Police spokesperson Wayne
Bvudzijena admitted that almost 30 MDC members have been killed
but questioned the death toll, saying "Of the 30,three of
the cases had no basis whatsoever while others were under investigation."
International disquiet
however is growing, with the UN's secretary-general adding
his voice to calls for international observers to oversee the run-off.
Gordon Brown, prime minister
of former colonial power Britain, has asked for the run-off to be
"monitored by the whole international community".
In a statement, UN chief
Ban Ki-moon said "future stages of the electoral process must
be conducted in a peaceful, credible and transparent manner in the
presence of international observers" while also voicing concern
about violence.
The run-off should in
theory take place on May 24 but the electoral commission has dropped
strong hints that the deadline will be missed.
According to results
released last Friday by the commission, Tsvangirai fell just short
of an overall majority needed to avoid a run-off but his party says
the figures were doctored to save Mugabe's skin.
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