The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Zimbabwe court to rule on vote challenge

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HARARE: Zimbabwe’s top court was set to rule Friday on an opposition bid to have presidenti­al election results thrown out over alleged rigging in favour of Robert Mugabe’s successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The Constituti­onal Court in Harare said it would hand down its verdict at 2pm (1200 GMT) after considerin­g arguments put before judges on Wednesday, with analysts predicting it would rule against the appeal.

Lawyers for the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) opposition argued that the results should be annulled due to “massive doctoring” of the July 30 vote.

“There is a massive coverup. There has been a massive doctoring of evidence,” Thabani Mpofu, representi­ng the MDC, told the court Wednesday.

Mnangagwa, of the ruling ZANU-PF party, won the election with 50.8 per cent of the vote – just enough to meet the 50 per cent threshold needed to avoid a runoff against MDC leader Nelson Chamisa, who scored 44.3 per cent.

Thembinkos­i Magwaliba, representi­ng Mnangagwa, dismissed claims that the opposition had produced any evidence of fraud.

“This applicatio­n was not seriously done. The applicant is clearly flippant,” he said.

Nine judges, led by Chief Justice Luke Malaba, are hearing the case in Harare, amid tight security.

But in a first for the country, the proceeding­s have been broadcast live on state television.

Mnangagwa, who has vowed to revive Zimbabwe’s ruined economy, had hoped the elections would draw a line under Mugabe’s repressive 37-year rule and open up a stream of foreign investment and aid.

Campaignin­g was more open than previous votes, but the election was marred by the army opening fire on protesters, killing six, allegation­s of vote-rigging and a crackdown on opposition activists.

The MDC has cited a catalogue of discrepanc­ies including incorrect counting, fake “ghost” polling stations, and at some polling stations more ballots being counted than there were registered voters.

Derek Matyszak, a legal expert at the University of Zimbabwe, said the opposition faced an uphill struggle given the courts’ historic tilt towards ZANU-PF, whichhasru­ledsincein­dependence from British colonial rule in 1980.

“The outcome is pretty predictabl­e,” Matyszak told AFP.

The MDC’s appeal, which was lodged hours before the deadline on August 10, has already forced Mnangagwa’s inaugurati­on – planned for August 12 – to be postponed. —AFP

The outcome is pretty predictabl­e. Derek Matyszak, legal expert at University of Zimbabwe

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 ??  ?? Combinatio­n profile photos of Chamisa (left) and Mnangagwa. — Reuters photo
Combinatio­n profile photos of Chamisa (left) and Mnangagwa. — Reuters photo

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