HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

Mugabe victory leaves west's policy in tatters 
African observers say poll was free and fair

-"This is a runaway victory," said the justice
minister, Patrick Chinamasa. "It was won on the issue
of the land." 


Chris McGreal in Harare and Ewen MacAskill
Thursday March 14, 2002
The Guardian

Britain and other western countries were left
frustrated and impotent yesterday after Robert Mugabe
formally declared that he had overwhelmingly won
Zimbabwe's presidential election. 

The extent to which Mr Mugabe outmanoeuvered the west
was made clear yesterday when southern African
countries issued a surprise statement declaring the
conduct of the election free and fair. 

The move is almost certain to scupper any hope of the
Commonwealth suspending Zimbabwe next week. 

At the weekend the European Union, prodded by Britain,
is planning to extend the range of sanctions against
Zimbabwe, targeting more members of the leadership.
Earlier this year, the EU imposed a travel ban on Mr
Mugabe and 19 members of his regime and froze their
overseas assets. 

But there were no illusions in Britain or elsewhere in
Europe that the measures will have any real leverage
in Harare. 

The Zimbabwe registrar-general, Tobaiwa Mudede,
declared that Mr Mugabe had won a fifth term in office
after the results from all 120 constituencies were
returned. He said Mr Mugabe had won 1,685,212 votes
against 1,258,401 for challenger Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). 

"We foresaw electoral fraud but not daylight robbery,"
Mr Tsvangirai said. "We find ourselves unable to
endorse the purported election of President Robert
Mugabe as Zimbabwe's president in this election. It's
the biggest election fraud I've witnessed in my life."


The MDC leader said the onus was on "the people" to
lead the way, whether passively or not. "We seek no
confrontation with the state because that's what they
want. But the people themselves have to decide what
action to take," he said. 

In the Harare townships where people stood in line for
two days to vote in the belief that they were
consigning Mr Mugabe to history, angry residents
looked to Mr Tsvangirai to confront the government. 

"We need Tsvangirai to tell Mugabe he cannot steal
this election," said Noel Gukuta, a youthful MDC
voter. "The soldiers have guns so we cannot fight him
but we can make sure he cannot rule us. We must
strike, we must march, we must show that we are not
goats." 

The country took the news of Mr Mugabe's victory with
no great celebrations or protests. 

The government, sensing murmurs about revolt, put the
army on full alert, deployed troops in key townships
and the police set up roadblocks on the main roads
into Harare to stop and search vehicles for weapons. 

The foreign secretary, Jack Straw, who is to make a
Commons statement today, said: "For months the
government of Zimbabwe has conducted a systematic
campaign of violence and intimidation, designed to
achieve an outcome - power at all costs." 

A senior state department official in Washington later
said: "We're considering further steps, given all the
things that happened before and during the elections."


Apart from the result, the main jolt yesterday was
that election observers from South Africa, Nigeria and
Namibia effectively endorsed the election. "It is our
considered view that the election was free and fair
and reflects the wishes of the people of Zimbabwe,"
Namibia's observer team said in a statement, adding
that the poll was "watertight, without room for
rigging". 

The South African team described the election as
"legitimate" while the Nigerian ob servers said they
had seen nothing that threatened the integrity of the
poll. 

The Commonwealth trio to decide on action next week is
made up of Australia, which will back suspension, the
South African leader, Thabo Mbeki, and the Nigerian
president, Olusegun Obasanjo. In Zimbabwe the
leadership of the congress of trade unions is
considering calling a two-day general strike to test
whether there would be popular support for a longer
protest, and various civil rights groups are meeting
today to discuss mass civil disobedience. 

The MDC's lawyers are also studying the possibility of
legal action. 

In the final results, Mr Mugabe made a net gain of
votes compared with the 2000 parliamentary election in
every province in the country. While there was
evidence of vote tampering in some areas, most of the
ballots dropped into the box with a cross by Mr
Mugabe's name were not fraudulent. There has been no
criticism of the count. 

"This is a runaway victory," said the justice
minister, Patrick Chinamasa. "It was won on the issue
of the land." 



__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Sports - live college hoops coverage
http://sports.yahoo.com/

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.a9617B
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to