Mugabe rules - again
2005-04-01 21:52
Special Report
Botswana President Ian Khama has accused Zimbabwe's long-time leader Robert Mugabe of failing to honour a power sharing deal and called for fresh elections in the country.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe says he doesn't expect the US sanctions on his country to be lifted soon.
Harare - President Robert Mugabe's party won enough seats to clinch a parliamentary majority, according to results announced on Friday in an election the opposition and rights groups said was skewed from the start.
Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai accused the government of stealing the poll and urged Zimbabweans to defend their votes.
Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) won 55 of parliament's 120 elected seats, compared to 34 for the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), the national election commission announced.
Mugabe appoints another 30 seats, ensuring his party a majority.
Tsvangirai told reporters at an earlier news briefing: "The government has fraudulently, once again, betrayed the people.
"We believe the people of Zimbabwe must defend their vote and their right to free and fair elections."
Mugabe nephew declared winner
Tsvangirai said inconsistencies in the results pointed to rigging.
He cited the example of Manyame, 40km southwest of Harare, where Mugabe's nephew, ruling party candidate Patrick Zhawao, was declared the winner.
Election officials announced on Thursday night that 14 812 people voted in that constituency. But early on Friday, they changed the total to 24 000 and said Zhawao got more than 15 000 votes.
Election commission officials refused to comment on the discrepancy, but said they doubted there was any rigging.
Tsvangirai's party has shied away from confrontation with Mugabe's increasingly repressive regime after street protests were violently crushed.
His party has preferred to fight its battles in the courts - now packed with judges sympathetic to Mugabe.
Tsvangirai said his party would do more this time than begin another round of appeals. Party leaders were meeting on Saturday to decide their next step.
Independent Zimbabwean rights groups and the United States, whose diplomats observed the campaign and voting, agreed with Tsvangirai that the polls were seriously flawed.
Lost six seats in by-elections
Although this campaign had been relatively peaceful, they said bloodletting and intimidation in previous years had already skewed the poll in favour of Mugabe's party.
The MDC won 57 of the 120 elected seats in the last legislative poll in 2000, but lost six of them in subsequent by-elections.
In 2002, Tsvangirai was narrowly declared loser of the presidential poll.
The independent Zimbabwe Election Support Network, which deployed 6 000 observers nationwide, said as many as a quarter of those who tried to vote before 15:15 (13:15 GMT) on Thursday were turned away because their names did not appear on the voters roll, or they failed to present proper identification.
George Chiweshe, a former army officer who headed the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, conceded some were turned away, but said the problem was not as big as the independent group estimated.
He said 116 198 of the 1.4 million people who tried to vote before 14:00 (12:00 GMT) - less than 10% - were not allowed.
- AP