In Summary
- Tsvangirai terms election a huge farce as Zanu-PF leaders insist victory is theirs
- AU and SADC observers clash with their local counterparts over exercise
Zimbabwean presidential hopeful Morgan
Tsvangirai on Thursday described Wednesday’s election as a “huge farce”—
hours after Robert Mugabe’s allies claimed victory.
The Movement for Democratic Change candidate warned that the country faced a serious crisis.
“It’s a sham election that does not reflect the
will of the people. In our view this election is null and void,” Mr
Tsvangirai said, pointing to a litany of alleged irregularities in the
vote.
“This election has been a huge farce,” he said.
“The shoddy manner in which it has been conducted and the consequent
illegitimacy of the result will plunge this country into a serious
crisis.”
Mr Mugabe’s allies claimed an “emphatic” victory, but local observers have called the vote “seriously compromised”.
Election day had passed off without widespread violence, but critics pointed at a flawed electoral roll, among other problems.
Mr Mugabe’s critics have accused him of rigging
the poll to extend his 33-year-rule. The 89-year-old leader is running
for a seventh term as president.
Unofficial results compiled by civil society
groups appear to show that he did surprisingly well in urban areas,
where he normally falls flat.
Mr Mugabe’s allies claimed his Zanu-PF party was headed for a ‘landslide victory’.
Early indications showed that Mr Tsivangirai performed below expectations.
Although official results were expected to start
trickling in late on Thursday, Zanu-PF officials on Thursday claimed
‘resounding victory’ on social networks.
The were backed by their poll monitors who were
relying on results being posted outside polling stations as vote
counting was continued.
Zanu-PF has since posted a disclaimer on its
Twitter feed, saying the results being peddled by its officials were not
authorised.
Mr Mugabe has since threatened to arrest anyone
who releases the election results without the approval of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC).
The commission said vote counting at polling
stations had been completed on Thursday, and results were now being
collated, the AFP news agency reports.
It is illegal to publish unofficial election results in Zimbabwe. Police have warned they will take action against anyone trying to leak early results.
It is illegal to publish unofficial election results in Zimbabwe. Police have warned they will take action against anyone trying to leak early results.
Extra police units—some in riot gear—have now been deployed in the capital, Harare.
Legal challenges are now likely to follow, but
much will depend on whether Zimbabwe’s neighbours endorse the poll, the
BBC’s Andrew Harding in Johannesburg reports.
The unofficial results show Mr Tsvangirai trailing the veteran ruler in some of his urban strongholds.
No comments:
Post a Comment