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Zimbabwe elections: Mugabe's opponents take control of parliament



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Published Date: 02 April 2008
THE future of Zimbabwe was still mired in uncertainty tonight as claim and counter-claim continued to surround the presidential elections.
Amid rumours and denials of secret deals for Robert Mugabe to step down it emerged that opponent Morgan Tsvangirai had officially triumphed in the country's parliamentary elections.

However the results of the voting to decide the next president h
ad still not been released.

An announcement by Mr Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change party that he had won that ballot led to thinly-veiled threats of reprisals from Mugabe's supporters.

It appeared increasingly likely that the presidential election would produce no clear winner and go into a second round.

But there were fears that might suit Mugabe, giving him time to rig the results in his favour.

In parliament the MDC now has 105 seats of the 210 available to 93 for Mugabe's ZANU-PF. One seat went to an independent which made it impossible for Mugabe's party to get a majority.

Meanwhile the state-controlled Herald newspaper predicted a run-off for the presidency in the first official admission that Mugabe has failed to win re-election after 28 years in power.

But MDC general secretary Tendai Biti said there was no need for a second vote.

"We maintain that we have won the presidential election outright without the need for a run-off," he said.

But he added the opposition would take part in a run-off if one were ordered – and that it expected to do even better in a two-way race.

Independent candidate Simba Makoni, a former Mugabe supporter, was believed to have siphoned off votes from both the opposition and the ruling party.

The figures Mr Biti gave for votes cast and those won by the candidates did not back up his contention that Mr Tsvangirai won 50.3% of the vote.

Mr Biti said 2,382,243 votes were cast, Mr Tsvangirai received 1,171,079 – about 49 percent – and Mugabe 1,043,349 – just under 44 percent.

Mugabe's deputy information minister Bright Matonga, said the opposition party was being "irresponsible" and "mischievous."

"They have got to be very careful with their activities," he said.
"They think they can provoke ZANU-PF, and the police and the army."

The government had previously warned that premature announcement of election results by the MDC would be tantamount to a coup attempt.

In campaigning, 84-year-old Mugabe had likened the elections to a boxing match, with his party winning in a knockout. Mugabe has been silent since the vote.

Speculation was rife that Mugabe loyalists were trying to buy time to rig results, even as people close to the electoral commission and the opposition reported secret negotiations to allow Mugabe to exit gracefully.
There were fears of rising tensions as people stayed away from work to await results.
Paramilitary police stepped up patrols in Harare and Bulawayo, the second city, and checked vehicles at roadblocks leading to the capital. Police ordered stores selling alcohol and beer halls to shut early.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa, a Nobel peace laureate, said he feared violence, "given the brutality with which the authorities have in the past reacted."

The Zimbabwe Election Support Network, a coalition of 38 civil society organisations, said its random representative sample of results displayed at polling stations showed Mr Tsvangirai won just over 49% of the vote and Mugabe 42%.



The full article contains 575 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 April 2008 5:25 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta; . CA.....a place in the Sun 02/04/2008 17:59:41
45
Media 1,
cape town
--------------------------

Dude U forgot to include

Galactic Cannibal Mindset = Success =

a Horizon outside the circle of particle matter.
----------------------------
U baddest boy on whole planet earth, for not include Galactic Cannibal.

U gobble down chill pill very soon, or U ride the great steel sword. Then U split in two, one half goes to Hu Jintao his birthday present .

The other half go to the Pope in Vat. City for canonization.

U be nice to Galactic; or it will ask Andromeda to speed up and devour the Milky way. Then U and all planets will be gone.

And Andromeda will be over weight and get obese and need to take slim-down pills.

Hey Relax dude
GC
2

Neanderthal75,

Rocky Mountains USA 02/04/2008 18:20:54
Dude,

Please go back into your drug induced haze will you? You're a complete embarrassment to any rationale person's way of thinking.

The situation in Zimbabwe is most serious and a mindless lout like you cheapens the debate in every aspect.

People are most likely going to lose their lives Dude and your continued display of abject stupidity is neither welcome nor sane.

Write coherently and you'll be listened to, otherwise, please be so kind as to grab your bong and start hitting away, or lay out several lines and snort away, or quite simply take scarf yourself-with 100% success I trust, as that's about all the brains you've got for such an effort.

3

Tobytoo,

Southington, U.S.A 02/04/2008 18:41:01
I can understand what #2 is saying and totally agree with him but what is #1 on about, being at #1 he seems to be answering someone at #45 how weird it that.
4

Media 1,

cape town 02/04/2008 19:26:05
Enter Morgan Tsvangirai and in 10 years, back to sqaure one...
Its the African way
5

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta, CA........captured from Mexico 1845 02/04/2008 20:17:35
2
Neanderthal75,
Rocky Mountains USA .
-----------------------------------------------
Dude,

Sounds like U are tree hugger, an African Tree hugger to be exact. And a holier than though, don't throw rocks in a glass house dude. WOW u must be the perfect and sanctimonious of all the posters on this link..

This situation in Zimbabwe has been going on, since Mugabe came to power . And nobody came to help the people there, ever since. Did U not know that dude.

Not even our evil Pres GW Bush. (I am assuming u are a US citizen, are U ?).

Because Bush is too bust trashing IRAQ and threatening IRAN.
Both situations are far more serious to world affairs, than Zimbawbe dude.

I never do hard drugs, ever. Just shrooms which grow naturally in fields and damp forests.

Unlike the millions of addicts, who do legal drugs such as booze and nocitene.
And who cost society $billions when they get sick from ingesting those legal drugs dude.

Try and use a little bit of logic here dude, and get off Ur pompous donkey or mule which ever it is u ride..

As for Africa, the entire continent is a tribal basket case . Always was, and will continue that way .

Remember Rwanda and the slaughter of 800,000 people in under 100 days.

Who went to help those people then, no body dude.

Suggest U swallow a chill pill and climb one of the 64 peaks @ 12,000' in the Western Rockies,.

Chill out dude and Happy Haggis day

GC


6

WL,

livingston 02/04/2008 22:35:20
Don't know what Tutu has to do with the elections in Zimbabwe !
7

El_Kabooko,

Sacramento 02/04/2008 23:50:48
Why are people voting against Robert Mugabe after 28 years in rule? Because they no longer have anything to loose!

I hope he leaves gracefully; however, his goons will run around terrorizing the country. I sense that the UN will have to get involved. I hope it's not Rwanda, part 2.
8

The Daleks,

Longmen 03/04/2008 03:42:01
Will the next group of robbers please form a kleptocracy....er, government.
9

The Daleks,

Longmen 03/04/2008 03:42:06
Will the next group of robbers please form a kleptocracy....er, government.

 

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