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A stain on democracy as voters are frogmarched to polling stations

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Published Date: 28 June 2008
ZIMBABWE'S main opposition leader has urged the world to ignore the country's "sham" election in which President Robert Mugabe was the only candidate.
The poll, marred by violence, was dismissed by Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), as "an exercise in mass intimidation, with people all over the country being forced to vote".

World leaders also condemned the election, as reports came that voters were marched to the ballot box by marshals carrying books with people's names.

Some voters were given pre-marked ballots and ordered to prove they had not voted for the opposition. Their fingers were marked by indelible ink, contradicting the Mugabe claim it was a free and fair election.

David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, joined a chorus of international condemnation, insisting the poll was not legitimate. He echoed the words of G8 foreign ministers at the close of a Tokyo conference of the world's wealthiest lands, saying: "There is no legitimacy for a government claiming election on the basis of today's events."

In Washington, Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, called the run-off a "sham". The US would raise possible sanctions with other UN Security Council members, she said.

Despite desperate attempts by the ruling Zanu-PF party to portray the contest as fair, the result will be undermined by what was tipped to be a patchy turn-out.

Abel Chikomo, of the independent Zimbabwe Media Monitoring Project in Bulawayo, said: "There are more queues at bars than at polling stations. People know the election is a farce."

Voters in rural areas had reportedly learned their homes would be burnt down if they did not go to the polling stations. Mr Tsvangirai, who had removed himself from the contest, warned supporters not to risk their personal safety by voting for anyone other than 84-year-old Mr Mugabe.

In an e-mail message from the Dutch Embassy where he had sought refuge, Mr Tsvangarai said he expected voters to be threatened, told to record their ballot numbers and filmed as they voted. He advised them not to resist.

Later, at a press conference, he said that he understood Thabo Mbeki, the South African president, planned to recognise the outcome of the poll.

This is in contrast to his pre-decessor, Nelson Mandela, who this week spoke of the failure of leadership in Zimbabwe.

Mr Mugabe himself appeared jovial as he voted, telling a reporter he was feeling "very fit, very optimistic, upbeat and hungry". But outside the Harare polling station, two Zimbabwean freelance journalists were detained by police as they waited to watch the president vote.

Dozens of opposition supporters have been killed and thousands of people injured in the run-up to the vote.

Yesterday, there were reports of paramilitary police in riot gear deployed to a central park in Harare. Militant supporters of Mr Mugabe also roamed the streets, singing revolutionary songs, heckling people and demanding to know why they were not voting.

A gunman in civilian clothes was also seen attacking a TV news cameraman and the voter he was interviewing on a Harare street, then forcing them into a police vehicle.

In contrast to the excitement and hope for change that marked the first round of voting in March, this poll is expected only to deepen the nation's pol-itical and economic crisis.


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  • Last Updated: 27 June 2008 11:09 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Mork the Orkan,

28/06/2008 00:03:22
I was dissapointed Alex Salmond didn't apologise for corresponding with Robert Mugabe when offered the chance a few days ago in FMQ's.

Alex Salmond has brought shame on Scotland for his actions.
2

,

28/06/2008 00:16:59
Comment Removed By Administrator
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3

,

28/06/2008 00:19:15
Comment Removed By Administrator
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4

Traquir , Alba,

28/06/2008 02:54:56
The international community has got do something
about this tyrant who makes even Saddam look like
a saint.

One a separate topic here two wonderful news
scoops from the London Times :

"Scots Labour leader Wendy Alexander ‘on the brink of resigning'"

"David Marshall, the veteran MP for Glasgow East, had decided to resign from the Commons because of ill-health — which would prompt a by-election that would give the Scottish Nationalists a big opportunity."

see - tinyurl.com/6q52mv
5

Raj Persaud's ghost writer,

28/06/2008 02:55:34
"A stain on democracy as voters are frogmarched to polling stations"

I thought the headline was an article about wendies latest "virtual think tank"

Frogmarched in and told what to say. Sounds like Calman.
6

donald,

glasgow 28/06/2008 06:56:46
Didn't Bendy become a leader of the opposition without any opposition? Didn't she collect money for that non election and then attempt to place the blame on a junior clerk? Didn't another Alexander not preside over an election shambles? Do the Tame Unions not frogmarch its members into block votes and donations to a corrupt regime? Doesn't Bendy imitate an annoying frog?
7

Erchie Broon,

28/06/2008 07:24:01
Once again South Africa used it's vote at the UN Security Council to prevent them from calling the election "illegal." Shows you where their sympathies lie.
8

Boy Wonder,

28/06/2008 07:35:27
Did you see Zimbabwean voters on TV forced to "justify" their voting for Mugabe? These people were absolutely terrified. Their bodies and faces belied what they were forced to do.

Mugabe and his cronies must be got rid off. By whatever means. Only then can Zimbabwe breathe some kind of freedom again.
9

JBowyer,

Australia 28/06/2008 08:01:51
Mugabe replaced Ian Smith, quite rightly but then had his only opponent Rev Joshua Nkomo murdered. As all Western lefty cheer squad said nothing, from then he has never looked back. To complain is racist if you are white and not the African way if you are not. We deserve Mugabe but his fellow Zimbabweans do not!
10

hertscot,

28/06/2008 08:25:17
A bad day for democracy.

A terrible day for Zimbabwe.

A day for the rest of the world to hang it's head in Shame!
11

Baggycat,

Peterborough 28/06/2008 08:43:07
**Mugabe replaced Ian Smith, quite rightly but then had his only opponent Rev Joshua Nkomo murdered. **
Absolute tripe! Nkomo died from prostate cancer in hospital in Harare!
While Mugabe is probably worse than Hitler, putting out garbage statements like the above doesn't help anything. Get your facts right or keep quiet.
12

Aubrey W,

Fyfe 28/06/2008 09:06:52
Oxford-educated Mugabe was viewed as the way forward. But the greatest stain is on Africa leaders and their parties in many countries, in which the principle of solidarity against 'imperialism' and 'the West', and the perpetuation of tribal patronage has taken precedence over the welfare of so many people. The lack of serious criticism of Mugabe until recent time is outrageous.
13

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 28/06/2008 09:06:58
When do we invade?
14

,

28/06/2008 09:12:57
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15

Shug the Dug,

Edinburgh 28/06/2008 09:14:48
We don't invade - there's no oil! We should stand and wring our hands in anguish, tut-tutting loudly, then get back to tacitly supporting the banks and other multi-nationals still trading in Zimbabwe by not boycotting them!!!
16

ThaiScot,

Thailand 28/06/2008 09:18:31
Ref # 13. Under Ian Smith, Rhodesia had more schools, hospitals and social services for all, black and white, than any other country in Africa. And there was no apartheid. UDI was forced on Smith by Harold Wilson, undoubtedly a communist sympathizer. This paved the way for the fiasco of the Biera patrol in which the Royal Navy was tasked to enforce sanctions against Rhodesia. Many of the pilots flying from our carriers were Rhodesian and would fly to neighbourng Zambia and pop over the border to see the folks for the weekend. Such was the Navy's contempt for Wilson's policy. But more important, Wilson allowed the Russians into Mozambique with as many arms as Mugabe and his terrorists could handle. The whole area was destabilized and and plunged into decades of war and lawlessness thanks to the stupidity, or more likely, the connivance, of Harold Wilson. After Mugabe took power Zimbabwe was plunged into genocide with a North Korean brigade of troops imported, with the approval of the Russians, to wipe out Mugabe's opposition. They were thorough and successful.

Have you been to what is now Zimbabwe? I have, 10 years ago, and even then, the people were desperate. A country that could feed the whole of Africa was disintegrating and the west stood by to let it happen, as it still does.
17

Red Tower,

Dunoon 28/06/2008 09:39:16
Mugabe is a loathsome tyrant. However we will not do anything about him because George Bush knows that there is not enough oil in Zimbabwe to make an invasion worthwhile.
A "stain on democracy"? Definitely. But is there not a stain on democracy every time we go to the general election polls? At the last election Blair won a majority with the same percentage of popular support as Sadaam.
18

Toast,

28/06/2008 10:10:49
Mudabe is much more than a "stain on democracy" he is a stain on all of humanity.
19

k adam,

Aberdeen 28/06/2008 10:18:11
'I was dissapointed Alex Salmond didn't apologise for corresponding with Robert Mugabe when offered the chance a few days ago in FMQ's.

Alex Salmond has brought shame on Scotland for his actions.'

I completely agree with this comment, as do most people in Scotland. Unfortunately, there are people that frequent this site that cannot see past the SNP lies, and I also agree that it's not really worth putting comment on this site. When you hear some of the comments you have to laugh at them, we all do, as they don't have a clue.

Scotland cannot be seen so be associated in any way with this tyrant.

Just wait and see the posts after lol
20

Stirling Sentinel,

Stirling 28/06/2008 10:35:35
What excellent news about Wendy resigning. A triumph for natural justice and an unwelcome anniversary present to Gordon Brown to add to his list of failures.Well done all those who kept up the pressure to ensure she did not escape retribution for her crimes.
21

A Better Way,

Edinburgh 28/06/2008 10:37:28
Such rank hypocrosy by those who write these stories and those of you who preach the Unionist Betrayal of the Scottish Nation.

Firstly we Scots are part of a political system that damned over one million Iraqi's to death as a result of an illegal war to grab control of Iraqi Oil by the west.

Secondly Britain and its puppet media pick on Mugabe mainly because its a way to look like the former superpower they were. Who else could they pick on, that couldnt fight back. Lets try criticising China and its repressive regime that allows you to vote for anyone you want as long as it is the State Machine. Anyone for Burma, Nigeria, Libya, Syria etc etc. Now you can see that the west has decided to let North Korea be praised by the System controlled Media run by the Murdoch, Conrad Black types.

Lets have a better look at the Florida votes that disappeared and allowed the Halfwit Dwarf George Bush to become president of a near one party state that potrays itself as the land of Liberty. My erky it is. You are allowed to vote right wing there, with an alternative of Ultra Fascist. Jeb Bush made sure his dwarf knucklehead brother got in, by rigging the Florida Voting system.

Then we come back to the most corrupt pretendy Democracies on the planet. Thats right the un United Kingdom that sets its entire establishment controlled media plus its brown envelope brigade to destroy a political party that is merely standing up for its right to free its people. Scotlands condition for joining together with Engerland to form the United KingdomS, was that Scotland legal system and Constitutional rights remain the supreme power in Scotland. Westminster which in fact is the established Parliament of the Act of Union, was taken over by the English to remove the possability of Scottish Voices being heard. Westminster's UNwritten constitution makes the Parliament the Sovereign Power. Scotlands Constitutional Rights have been eroded to the point that as a Sovereign People we can only h
22

A Better Way,

Republic of Scotland 28/06/2008 10:41:09
we can only have a referendum if the English Allow it. Well I am sorry but that is an illegal act under the terms of the act of Union. The Scottish Peoples rights as the Sovereign Power in Scotland have never been recinded by the not closed and still open Scottish Parliament of 1707. There is not one piece of legislation that has been passed since 1707 that would stand up in any Constitutional Independant Court because of the failure to meet the terms of the Scottish Constitution and Act of Union.

Dont tell us about Robert Mugabe when we have two Parties and the riff raff LibDems looking after each others backs because they represent the same political anti Scottish Viewpoint.

Compared to these trash who represent anyone but their own kind, Robert Mugabe is a Saint. Democracy died out way before Mugabe was a twinkle in his mothers eye. Stalin 60 million, Hitler 11 million and Mao 100 million plus are joined by Blair/Brown 1 million Iraqi's and god knows how many Iranians in the future, when they the US nuke them into dust.

Mugabe could take lessons from many barbaric despots who support England over their own.
23

Raj Persaud's ghost writer,

28/06/2008 10:43:15
AM2 resigns on the same morning as Wendy...............

Ack well. Ding dong the witch is dead..................
24

Raj Persaud's ghost writer,

28/06/2008 10:44:48
Ack mibbe not! noiced his post is dated may!

interesting to note AM2 is now a persona.

he will appear as hypen aka - , formerly known as AM2.
25

Boy Wonder,

28/06/2008 11:38:29
Maybe we can send Wendy to Zimbabwe, since her pal, Jock will be in Malawi??
26

Boy Wonder,

28/06/2008 11:38:41
Maybe we can send Wendy to Zimbabwe, since her pal, Jock will be in Malawi??
27

Alberto.,

28/06/2008 12:11:14
''A stain on democracy as voters are frogmarched to polling stations''

************

Thank Goodness this will never happen in our well known Democratic Country!

Once we get the EU up and running everything with their essential Policy of Total Control (absolutely essential to avoid failure!)we shall not have to worry any more - elections will be completely banned, as I understand it will be a criminal offence to show any form of criticism towards them!!

Good Heavens! Is that the time again - almost 1939 and all that coming up - anyone remember!
28

Senga Jean,

28/06/2008 12:15:23
#1 I think you already know that Alex Salmond sent a "flier" to the leaders of all the non-aligned nations on the subject of nuclear weapons. Some of these leaders are good,some bad and some are ugly. Jaw,jaw is always better than to war,war. (now who said that?)
29

Senga Jean,

Scotland.... a nascent democracy.. 28/06/2008 12:17:51
#1 Morkan the Orkan I think you already know that Alex Salmond sent a "flier" to the leaders of all the non-aligned nations on the subject of nuclear weapons. Some of these leaders are good,some bad and some are ugly. Jaw,jaw is always better than to war,war. (now who said that?)
30

Senga Jean,

28/06/2008 12:18:52
Are you Nicol stevens?
31

Huntly loon,

Aberdeenshire 28/06/2008 12:42:18
It was an uncharacteristic lack of judgement by Alex Salmond not to have used the Nicol Stephen opportunity to condemn Mugabe instead of merely scoring points at Stephen. I know Salmond was dealing with nuclear weapons and non-proliferation but it was an error not to use the occasion presented.

All supporters of the SNP are appalled by what has and is happening in Zimbabwe and my sympathies are with the poor suffering people there. Scotland will be playing in World Cup qualifiers hopefully leading to get to the finals in South Africa. The SFA is a member of FIFA. They should be expressing their concerns on staging the final in that country. What is happening in Tibet pales into insignificance compared to what is happening in southern Africa. South Africa should be told that the finals will not be held there while they play the role of apologists in the United Nations for a barbaric tyrannical despot.
32

Arnold Codger,

Glasgow 28/06/2008 13:32:55
The Scotsman newspaper is a breach of our democracy. They pulled the Wendy Resigns story when there was a hundred comments on it. Now it is back with No opportunity to comment. The UK supports idependence everywhere in the world except in the UK.
33

Griffe,

28/06/2008 15:32:50
Remove the 'mad dog' and the pack of hyenas who keep him in power. The should all stand trial in The Hague.
34

AlecJ,

Aberdeen 28/06/2008 17:06:46
This email was forwarded to me yesterday. May I add my request that you add your prayers to theirs

From: JOHNSTON, PATRICIA
Sent: 24 June 2008 15:54
To: ALL STAFF 121
Subject: FW: Zimbabwe

Dear Friends,

I’ve just received this from my colleagues in The United Free Church. As a Denomination we work with United Congregation Churches of Southern Africa (UCCSA) which includes the Synod of Zimbabwe.

Tricia
Patricia A Johnston (Rev.)
China Field Officer
Scottish Churches' China Group
121 George Street
Edinburgh
Scotland, UK
EH2 4YN

Tel: +44(0) 131 225 5722 ext 391
Fax: +44(0) 131 226 6121

Website: www.sccg.org.uk

Registered Charity No.: SC033740
If you're following the Zimbabwe situation, you will know that the candidate for the opposition, Morgan Tsvangirai, has withdrawn from the upcoming run-off election, declaring that the election is no longer credible and the loss of life among his supporters is too high. I felt that I should write something in light of this news, but what could I say? Then someone said it for me. Copied below are parts of a letter from a pastor in Zimbabwe, which I received yesterday from a friend. Please read this cry for prayer from the front lines:
As I sit here in my office writing this update, I have a sense that we as a church have reached the point that Habakkuk reached in the turn of the 7th and 6th century. God has brought us to a point in our experience where we ask Him, “Lord, do You hear? Lord, why are You doing nothing?”
It seems unlikely that the President will relinquish power in any scenario. The army and air force and police are puppets, or rather fellow dominoes who realise that when one domino falls over, the whole lot will collapse. So, without wanting to raise panic, or undue fear, my feeling is that the future is most serious indeed.
What has been happening? Well, after the first election we were shocked as a nation. It was all so calm, so peaceful -- the parliament was won by the op
35

AlecJ,

Aberdeen 28/06/2008 17:08:36
Continued
What has been happening? Well, after the first election we were shocked as a nation. It was all so calm, so peaceful -- the parliament was won by the opposition, as well as the presidential vote. We foolishly believed that we were getting a new government. And many of us concluded that there was no way that the government, and the president in particular, could manoeuvre out of this. He had lost, it was clear, it had to be accepted!
Oh no it did not! We have seen what can only be described as diabolical cleverness and demonic wickedness in the past months. Long delays in announcements, frustrating the work of the electoral commission, miring the issue in court proceedings ..... and then the violence. Slowly but steadily, well planned and orchestrated the violence has grown. Intimidation has always been one of the political tools of this regime. In this election, it is the only tool. There is one sentence, indeed one word on the manifesto of this election campaign. It is the word “fear.” In past elections votes could be bought, bought with food, bought with promises, bought with land. Now the food has run out, promises are seen to be hollow, land is taken and misused. Now, votes must be coerced, and coerced through violence.
And what is happening? Youths are being given ruling party T-shirts and formed into mobs, transported to areas other than their home areas, and given the go-ahead to beat and assault at whim. Rumours are that criminals have been released from prison on the proviso that they fulfil certain duties for the powers that be. Minibuses used for public transport are being stopped and the drivers beaten. Passengers have to get out and chant ZANU-PF (ruling party) slogans or they are beaten. People are asked to repeat the party slogan and if they do not know it, they are beaten. Reports come to our ears daily of acts of torture and oppression and violence. Abductions happen regularly, murders occur and are unreported. And in the midst the gov
36

AlecJ,

Aberdeen 28/06/2008 17:09:52
Continued
Abductions happen regularly, murders occur and are unreported. And in the midst the government maintains the posture of pretended indignant integrity, hypocritically acting as though their hands are clean and the opposition had better stop the violence.
What does that mean on the ground in our country at the moment? It means that all of us are somewhat fearful. I recently went to buy some maize meal for our staff and social concern ministry. I had heard about its availability (on the black market of course, none in the shops). On the way back I took a longer, more circuitous route just in case I was stopped. Is carrying food a crime? No, but ...... Churches have been stopped from distributing food. Even an organisation that feeds street children was told to stop operations. How tragic to live in an environment when doing good has to be done in secret, lest it be seen and stopped. Many of our church folk learn the slogans of the day for their own protection. Minibuses plaster themselves with party posters as a form of protection. We cancelled our youth meetings last night and encourage people to be off the streets during the evening. Late last night, taking our assistant caretaker to catch a ride home and having to drop him in town, I myself was feeling a bit nervous. Even writing these words, letting you know some of the things that are really happening, I have a concern about who might get hold of this and what might it be used for. Such fearfulness is wrong.
Friends, we need you to pray please. God must hear, and God must do something. The economy spirals in free fall. Food is short, unavailable on the shelves of stores or far too expensive if there for the average person, the black market thrives for all basic commodities, inflation figures make no sense, in the millions of percent now. Food procurement is challenging and expensive, the government charges an iniquitous duty of 65% on food brought in, a duty charge that is levied on transport as well.
37

AlecJ,

Aberdeen 28/06/2008 17:10:46
Continued
Food procurement is challenging and expensive, the government charges an iniquitous duty of 65% on food brought in, a duty charge that is levied on transport as well. The wickedness is unbelievable, the lack of concern for struggling people is demonic, the deafness of those in power to the cries of the suffering is hard to believe. How can any in power inflict such suffering upon their own people?
We need you to pray please. As a church, in our fear and uncertainty and concern, we seek to remain faithful, we look to God, but we are honestly asking the Habakkuk questions. We feel that we pray and God does not listen, we feel that we cry and God does not act.
So please, this week especially, pray that we will understand God’s larger purpose and be willing to endure with an eye on that. Pray for God’s righteous judgement to come, for God to lift His powerful hand, for evil to be crushed, for those that dig a pit to fall into it, and those that spread a net to be caught up in it, that God will be seen to defend the defenceless and father the fatherless.
Please pray that God will hear, and that God will act. And that suffering will cease.
We are grateful for your interest and concern. Let my regular apology for the length of the communication bring it to an end.
May God be glorified in all things.
38

The Batboy,

28/06/2008 17:41:31
#38-41. "God" is noticably absent from the world these days. Is he/she still alive?
39

indune1,

Canada 28/06/2008 17:54:07

33 - Churchill.
40

Alberto.,

28/06/2008 19:33:31
I understand that the Mugabe Chappie is at last getting serious attention paid to his antics - even stretching now to the unimaginable activity in the Commons and the Lords, of some of the political set actually reaching the as yet dim (to them!) 'warning light' of something being amiss - not yet all of them of course (a few still awaiting orders from the top!!) but it is said on one occasion a member was actually caught out raising 'both eyebrows' when the point was raised!

The cricket situation was raised at the time, but as this activity seems to be more sacred than I thought, it was said this point was best left answered, or not, by them 'at the top of the shop!' - who really know about these things, and any way they were not at that particular time properly attired to address points on something so sacred to the Nation - and there you have it - the Mugabe saga has not gone completely un-noticed, as one might have easily thought!

Funny old game this Politics - innit?
41

Alberto.,

28/06/2008 21:53:01
I understand the British Government has been very slow to re-act to this 'Mugabe chappie' and his ‘alleged’ antics, mainly because, as far as they know, everything that has / is been said about Zimbabwe, can only (in Politikspeek!) be classed as 'Hearsay' - possibly 'Tittle-Tattle!'

You know how it is - they don't want to go charging in like madmen and make themselves look foolish - even more than some already consider them to be!

Every endeavour has been made, starting quite some months ago - and is still ongoing, to form a 'visiting committee' in order to get 'on the spot' gainful 'official proof' in the matter, but, very surprisingly to us, so far sufficient ‘volunteers’ have not yet emerged to go (and we understand it’s a beautiful Country - it says so in all the leaflets!)

The committee cannot be finalised or do any more until the party is in full complement, which is proving difficult to assemble!

It is most dis-appointing for such an important task, as we are only two members short - and we only wanted three altogether. Most unusual state of affairs as, in general, such alluring ‘Freebies’ - as they are sometimes referred to, by those not familiar with political arrangements, are normally overwhelmed with volunteer ‘applicants’ on the first day of announcement!

Presumably either some important holiday bookings (with deposit paid!) - or even more important, a serious (is their any other kind?) cricket match might be clashing with the suggested dates of the visit! It is all so frustrating at times - luckily not very often!

As readers will obviously observe - life in the Political game, is anything but ‘Easy-Peasy’ - although the money is quite good with plenty of it, and we can spend it anywhere these days - Oooops!


42

Huntly loon,

Aberdeenshire 29/06/2008 13:58:40
I saw the long comment of AlecJ and printed it out. I took it to the kirk at Fintray this morning and gave it to our minister. Just in case this might get back to those in Zimbabwe who asked for our prayers. Let them know that we said prayers for them this morning that they may soon be free of the violence and murder, poverty and hunger. We know that politicians lack the will and are incapable of helping them at this time and that they have no one to turn to apart from God. Out thoughts are with you in your suffering.
43

Pilrig.,

Livingston 29/06/2008 22:37:27
19 - no apartheid in Rhodesia, just an amazing coincidence that those with black skins didn't get to vote.
44

Charles.D,

Johannesburg 30/06/2008 12:00:26
#47 So that is what Apartheid means! "Black man no vote!" for your information apartheid was and could only be practiced in South Africa, because the National Party invented it. there were whites only toilets,busses,hospitals,benches,parks, you name it and there was a whites only one. and black man no vote.

In Rhodesia, only the Black man no vote, EVERYTHING else was open to all races,money was the social devider. I lived there for 30 years, and never had the vote, why? because I am a South African, not Rhodesian. Oh and by the way I am White!

 

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