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Zimbabwe opposition declares victory
HARARE (Zimbabwe)—President Robert Mugabe’s party lost control of
parliament, the latest official results showed Wednesday, hours after
the opposition claimed it also had won the presidency.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission results appear to confirm the
unraveling of a regime that has ruled this southern African country
since independence from Britain three decades ago, in recent years
overseeing the collapse of the economy and accused of stifling
democracy.
The official results gave the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
105 seats to 93 for Mugabe’s ZANU-PF in the 210-seat House of Assembly.
One seat went to an independent. That means that even if ZANU-PF wins
all the remaining seats, it will not have the seats needed for a
majority.
At a news conference earlier Wednesday, the opposition said that its
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, had won 50.3 percent of the vote compared to
43.8 percent for Mugabe. “We maintain that we have won the presidential
election outright without the need for a run-off,” Movement for
Democratic Change general secretary Tendai Biti told a news conference.
However, the figures he gave did not back up his contention. Biti said
2,382,243 votes were cast, and that Tsvangirai received 1,171,079 —
about 49 percent — while Mugabe got 1,043,349 — just under 44 percent.
Contacted by The Associated Press soon after the news conference, Biti
could not immediately explain the discrepancy.
The ruling ZANU-PF party rejected the opposition’s claims, saying that
it would await the full results from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission,
which has not yet published the outcome of Saturday’s presidential poll.
Deputy Information Minister, Bright Matonga, said the opposition party
was being “irresponsible” and “mischevious.” “They have got to be very
careful with their activities,” Matonga told the British Broadcasting
Corp. “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 Movement for Democratic Change would be
tantamount to a coup attempt.
Earlier Wednesday, the state Herald newspaper predicted a runoff in the
first official admission that Zimbabwe’s autocratic leader of 28 years
has failed to win re-election. A presidential candidate needs at least
50 percent plus one vote to avoid a runoff. A runoff would have to be
held within 21 days of the first round.
Biti said the opposition would take part in a runoff if one was 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.
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. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack on Wednesday
urged Zimbabwe “to make known the election results immediately.”
“If you look at the results of the parliamentary election, there is a
vote for change,” he said. News reports on the presidential election, he
said, show “there very clearly was a competitive presidential election.
... That is not something we have seen in past years in Zimbabwe.”
Asked if the U.S. was encouraging Mugabe to step aside, McCormack said:
“Let’s have the next step be the electoral results be put forward.”
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband hailed Tsvangirai’s behavior as
“statesmanlike,” but stopped short of backing opposition claims of
victory on Wednesday.
Britain, the former colonial ruler, has long been a sharp critic of
Mugabe, and Miliband said he did not want to hand Mugabe’s party
propaganda points by endorsing a candidate and was not going to pre-empt
official results. “The delay in announcing the (official) outcome must
be seen as a deliberate and calculated tactic,” Miliband told lawmakers
in London.
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. —Agencies
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