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Mugabe aides
discuss ceding power
HARARE (Zimbabwe)—Advisers of President Robert Mugabe and opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai are discussing the possibility of Zimbabwe’s
longtime leader relinquishing power, The Associated Press learned
Tuesday.
Independent observers say trends indicate Tsvangirai won the most votes
in the presidential race, but not enough to avoid a runoff — a prospect
that could be humiliating to the 84-year-old president. No returns from
Saturday’s presidential vote have been made public, fueling fears of
rigging. Mugabe has been accused of stealing past elections, though that
was before Zimbabwe’s economy collapsed and leading members of his own
party openly defied him.
A person close to the Electoral Commission told the AP that Mugabe has
been informed he is far behind Tsvangirai in preliminary election
results, and that there could be an uprising if Mugabe were declared the
winner. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the issue, said aides to both men were discussing
Mugabe’s ceding power. There has been no official confirmation from
either side. Marwick Khumalo, head of the Pan-African Parliament
observer mission, said top members of Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party were
worried the government may have lost the elections. “I was talking to
some of the big wigs in the ruling party and they also are concerned
about the possibility of a change of guard,” he told South African
Broadcasting Corp.’s SAfm radio.
“ZANU-PF has actually been institutionalized in the lives of
Zimbabweans, so it is not easy for anyone within the sphere of the
ruling party to accept that ‘maybe we might be defeated or might have
been defeated,’” he added.
It took the Electoral Commission 30 hours to release results for 132
parliamentary seats. Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change won 68
of those seats, including six for a breakaway faction. Mugabe’s party
had 64. Lovemore Sekeramayi, an electoral official, went on state
television to say the commission was receiving presidential votes and
would need to collate and verify them.
“We urge all Zimbabweans to remain patient as we go through this
meticulous process,” he said. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called
for the immediate release of results. “Results should be published
immediately and the elections must be seen to be fair,” Brown told
reporters in London. “It’s very important that the democratic rights of
the Zimbabwe people be respected and upheld and recognized.”
Tsvangirai’s party said he was leading the presidential race with 60
percent of votes, based on counts reported from 128 of the 210
parliamentary districts. The party gave Mugabe 30 percent of the votes
and the rest to Simba Makoni, a former Mugabe loyalist. Tsvangirai lost
narrowly in 2002, according to official results that observers charged
were rigged.
The opposition party also claimed it had an overwhelming lead of 96 of
the 128 parliamentary seats for which it had results. “We have won an
election. Mugabe’s victory is not possible given the true facts,” Tendai
Biti, secretary-general of Tsvangirai’s party, told reporters Monday.
If the margins reported by the MDC hold, it would be a crushing blow to
Mugabe, who headed a guerrilla movement that fought a seven-year bush
war to end white minority rule and bring democracy to Zimbabwe in 1980.
Mugabe was hailed then for his policies of racial reconciliation and
development that brought education and health to millions denied those
services under colonial rule. Zimbabwe’s economy thrived on exports of
food, minerals and tobacco.
The unraveling began when Mugabe ordered the often-violent seizures of
white-owned commercial farms, ostensibly to return them to the landless
black majority. Instead, Mugabe replaced a white elite with a black one,
giving the farms to relatives, friends and cronies who allowed
cultivated fields to be taken over by weeds.—Agencies
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