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| Zimbabwe results anger opposition | |
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Article Date: May 5, 2008 |
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Zimbabwe's opposition has disputed the official results of the
presidential election after they declared its candidate the leader, but
said he faced a second round run-off.
Lovemore Sekeramayi, chief elections officer of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC), had earlier said that Tsvangirai received
47.9 per cent of the vote, beating Robert Mugabe, the president, on 43.2
per cent. "Since no candidate has got the majority of the valid vote, a second election shall be held on a date to be advised by the commission," Sekeramayi said.
Under Zimbabwe election law, the run-off has to be held within 21
days of the announcement of the result.
However, he questioned whether the results accurately reflected
support for the incumbent.
The MDC has previously rejected the idea of a run-off and on Friday
accused the commission of inflating Mugabe's number of votes by 47,000
and deflating those for Tsvangirai by 50,000. "Morgan Tsvangirai is the president of the republic of Zimbabwe to the extent that he won the highest number of votes," Tendai Biti, the party's general secretary, told a press conference in South Africa.
"Morgan Tsvangirai has to be declared the president of Zimbabwe." Haru Mutasa, Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting from Harare, said that the MDC considers the 47.9 per cent figure to be "wrong" and that it "should have been in the fifties". "They [opposition] are saying that the ZEC rigged the numbers to ensure that there is a run-off," she said.
"They also saying that if they take part
in the run-off they will not be allowed to campaign freely and that
their supporters would be further intimidated [by security forces]." The government has dismissed the accusations. Source: Al Jazeera & agencies
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