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Zimbabwe presidential election results to be verified

Zimbabwe's Electoral Commission is due to start the verification process for the country's presidential elections, more than a month after the vote was held.

  • Reuters
  • Published: 09:05 May 1, 2008
  • Gulf News

  • The elections in Zimbabwe were held more than a month ago
  • Image Credit: Gulf News archive
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Harare: Officials began verifying the results from Zimbabwe's March 29 presidential poll yesterday, bringing a step closer the release of the long-delayed vote count, the electoral commission said.

Senior government sources say opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has beaten President Robert Mugabe but not by the outright majority to avoid a run-off ballot with the veteran leader, who has held power for 28 years.

The month-long delay to the results has raised fears of bloodshed and Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change has accused Mugabe of prolonging the wait to rig the outcome.

The checks to the results are designed to ensure all candidates are happy with the electoral commission's figures. Representatives of Tsvangirai and Mugabe were on hand as it began in Harare's International Conference Centre.

"This process can take a day, a week, even two weeks. It depends on whether we agree on and can tally our figures," said Chris Mbanga, Tsvangirai's representative at the vote check.

Foreign pressure

Tsvangirai has spent weeks outside Zimbabwe in a bid to raise foreign pressure on Mugabe to concede the election in a country suffering economic collapse. He said in an interview broadcast on Thursday that he would return after verification of the results.

"Once that is done, then we know who has won the election and then I will make the necessary steps to go back," he said in an interview broadcast on French news channel France 24. No result has been announced to the public yet, but senior government sources have said Tsvangirai won 47 per cent of the vote against the president's 43 per cent. If confirmed, that would mean that a run-off is necessary.

The MDC won control of Zimbabwe's parliament in a parallel election more than one month ago, and it says that Tsvangirai also won an outright majority in the presidential so that no run-off is needed.

Tsvangirai has suggested he could still take part in a second round if international observers led by the United Nations monitored the process. The only observers at the first round were from Zimbabwe's neighbours.

If Tsvangirai refused to take part in a run-off, Mugabe would be declared the winner, according to election rules. A run-off should be held within 21 days of a result being announced.

The MDC has accused the government of launching a campaign of violence and intimidation ahead of the possible second round and said 20 of its members had been killed by pro-government militias.

The government denies carrying out a violent campaign and accuses the MDC of political attacks.

Zimbabweans had hoped the election would ease economic turmoil. But severe food, fuel and foreign currency shortages are worsening.

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