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Zimbabwe opposition leader claims presidential poll win



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Published Date: 31 March 2008
ZIMBABWEAN opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has taken 60 per cent of votes in the country's election, it was reported today.
His tally is double that of President Robert Mugabe, the opposition MDC party said today, quoting unofficial tallies.

The latest official results released by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission showed the MDC and Mugabe's Zanu-PF runnning neck-and-
neck with 12 seats each from a total parliament of 210 constituencies.

No official presidential results have been issued so far.

Election monitors, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said six Cabinet ministers had lost their seats, including some leading members of Mugabe's inner circle. Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa is one of those said to have lost his seat.

Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) secretary general Tendai Biti told a news conference: "From the 128 constituencies whose results we have calculated so far, we have 96 out of the 128 parliamentary seats and Morgan Tsvangirai is at 60 per cent, Robert Mugabe is at 30 per cent."

A delay in declaring the outcome, when some initial results are said to have been known as early as Saturday night, heightened fears of rigging and brought security forces on to the streets.

An opposition spokesman said: "We'll give Mugabe time to accept defeat."

Western diplomats reported that many younger army officers showed open defiance of orders to vote for Mugabe.

The first results were announced in an early-morning broadcast on radio and television by the deputy chief elections officer, Utoile Silaigwana. Then he went off the air saying: "We'll be back when we have more results."

Noel Kututwa, head of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network, which includes civic, church and other groups, said: "Clearly the delay is fuelling speculation that something might be going on."

Running against Mugabe were Tsvangirai, 55, who narrowly lost disputed 2002 elections, and former ruling party loyalist and finance minister Simba Makoni, 58.

If no presidential candidate wins 50 per cent plus one vote, there will be a run-off.

Security and government officials loyal to Mugabe have warned Tsvangirai against declaring a victory. "It is called a coup d'etat and we all know how coups are handled," presidential spokesman George Charamba was quoted as saying in the state-controlled Sunday Mail newspaper.

Judge George Chiweshe, chairman of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, was forced to flee from a Harare hotel yesterday after he was mobbed by journalists and local people.

"This has been a more complicated election," Chiweshe said. "We will be releasing the results as soon as we can."

He said it was taking time because Zimbabweans – for the first time – voted for president, the two houses of Parliament and local councillors, so four ballots had to be counted for each voter.

Downing Street today called for "clarity" as soon as possible in results of the elections.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown's spokesman said there should not be "undue delay" in announcing the outcome.





The full article contains 493 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 31 March 2008 1:16 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

Stefania Alvarez,

31/03/2008 13:48:05
Is the dictator Mugabe likely to take any notice ... nope !!!
2

SwampFox,

St Petersburg, FL 31/03/2008 17:38:54
For so many years, the world isolated Rhodesia and eventually forced Mugabe on the country. Is it just me, or is this fact being forgotten on purpose now that everyone knows how evil Mugabe really is?

Just what was so bad about Ian Smith anyway?
3

Neanderthal75,

Rocky Mountains USA 31/03/2008 19:33:08
Hello SwampFox,


The simple answer is this: he was the wrong color for an African and the Politically Correct Dweebs could not and would not accept him or any other white or colored person, in THE position of power.

I would dearly love to get a bunch of those PC Idiots in a room, present them with pics of all the men, women, and children MURDERED by Mugabe throughout the last two decades, and make them look at those pics over and over, for a week straight.

Those of us who repeatedly warned of the coming devastation were called "racists". When we said that Mugabe, would strip white land owners of their lands and thereby cause major hardships for the average person in Zimbabwe, by creating starvation, massive loss of crops, and catastrophic economic deterioration, were once again called "racists".

When we said that ANY ANC lead government would do the same thing in South Africa, the term "racists" was once again applied to us.

Now that the events in Zimbabwe and South Africa have/are proved/proving us to be correct, the low life Politically Correct Do-Gooder Scum are nowhere to be found, no apologies, no remorse, no change of mind/heart on those or other issues: they're to d a m n e d busy attending several PC Cocktail Parties, trying to get more "political movement" the the NEXT PC catastrophe.

This time around though, it looks like it'll be the Sudan (but the PC'ers do NOT have the spine to admit that it is Islam which is the problem, NOT mere 'exceptions' to Islam), Tibet, Burma, and who knows where else.

I just wish the PC Scum would be required to live in the h e l l holes they help to create.

Cheers from the Rockies
4

Toast,

31/03/2008 19:35:54
Tszangirai can get 90% of the vote and Mugabe will still win,and most african nations will back him, kinna hard to take africa seriously with such corruption.
5

Chris,

Edinburgh 31/03/2008 22:35:46
I don't know which is worse for me: Mugabe and his cronies fiddling the election (again) and the world looks on (again), or my agreeing with every word #3, Neanderthal75 has written. This is the second time in a week I have agreed with Neanderthal75, I must be getting senile.
6

Neanderthal75,

Rocky Mountains USA 31/03/2008 23:10:05
Hello Chris,


Or one would ask, finally coming to your senses?

Welcome aboard.

Cheers from the Rockies
7

Rodger the Leith lodger,

edinburgh 01/04/2008 00:38:33
Sorry Neanderthal75 #6 I've juat got to rise to the bait - Economics, greed and arrogance have killed zimbabwe

PC dweebs - what is that?
Politically correct? What does that really mean? 'UK Daily Mail' newspaper rantings to illicit response and boost meagre circulation?

What's the political bit? What politics? its just about manners and common courtesy which good parents have always taught for generations anyway? Or maybe not....

Anyway, it is perhaps ironic that in the current circumstances a resident from what appears to be lala land proports to understand politics or the world outside rambowood or dysentry world.

You really need to look at the history of that part of Africa again and consider what happened in zimbabwe and why. Bad, bad, and bad on both sides.

But, as has been said so ofen before, why oh why did the usa as a real potential 'world police' not storm in to zimbabwe to release the oppression of an oppressed population under the mugabe regime years ago? Or even more, why not dive into Palestine to quash the real problem of an immoral foreign occupation? There are many others that I could list.

However, perhaps I am being too harsh, maybe we should just let people with your views decide on what is 'Just PC crap' and let you dictate what rights people should have, Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin and Mao all had the same idea. Perhaps world opinion will change once your wee dode bush is bumped by Barack Hussein Obama, and the USA becomes an icon of toleranace and freedom - but there again, was it not supposed to be like that anyway?
8

oder,

Dundee 01/04/2008 01:10:43
3 Neanderthal75,Rocky Mountains USA


"The simple answer is this: he was the wrong color for an African"

Spot on!

 

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