ZEC announcement

ZEC announcement

Johannesburg/Harare - The Zimbabwe Election Commission began Monday morning
to release the results of Saturday's elections, in which the opposition
claims to have ousted the country's leader of 28 years, President Robert
Mugabe.


The ZEC began issuing results from the assembly elections, one of four votes
in the combined presidential, assembly, senate and local elections, with ZEC
chairman George Chiweshe warning the process could take two days.

Tensions rose Sunday as the ZEC kept mum on the outcome of the election, in
which Mugabe was battling for another five years in power, and the Movement
for Democratic Change of Morgan Tsvangirai rushed to claim victory.

The MDC claimed to have thumped Mugabe and his Zanu-PF, including in some
rural areas previously considered ruling party strongholds, but their claim
was based on partial, unofficial results.

Government spokesman George Charamba termed the victory claim a coup d’etat,
adding ‘we all know how coups are handled.’

The elections, which were largely peaceful, were seen as a vote mainly on
the economic chaos wrought by Mugabe’s populist policies, that have resulted
in six-figure inflation and widespread food, fuel and drug shortages.

An observer team from the 14-nation Southern African Development Community,
while citing a number of concerns, said the elections were ‘peaceful’ and
‘credible.’

The MDC claimed 67 per cent of the vote after results from around one third
of polling stations were counted. ‘But they (the government) still might
steal it,’ MDC secretary-general Tendai Biti warned.

The government dismissed the MDC’s victory claim as ‘speculation and lies’
that caused ‘unnecessary havoc.’

Mugabe, who declared himself confident of another five years to add to his
28 years in power, has vowed to respect the wishes of Zimbabweans but also
said recently the MDC would ‘never’ govern.

Post published in: News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *