The Scotsman

Opposition supporters’ election protest turns violent in Harare

● Rioting erupts over results delay ● Troops open fire on protesters

- By CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

Rioting erupted yesterday in Zimbabwe’s capital as opposition supporters clashed with police and army troops over delays in announcing results from the presidenti­al election, the country’s first since the fall of longtime leader Robert Mugabe.

The security forces opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas, and protesters burned cars and threw rocks as helicopter­s hovered above Harare. A body was seen near the demonstrat­ion.

Armoured personnel carriers ferried troops and riot police to the scene.

Dark smoke rose near the offices of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission where protesters burned tyres and at least two vehicles. The commission postponed announcing results of Monday’s tightobser­ver ly fought presidenti­al race, pitting president Emmerson Mnangagwa against opposition leader Nelson Chamisa.

The commission said it would release vote totals “sometime” today, even though it said most of the results “are here with us.” Agents for all 23 candidates must verify them first, it said.

The ruling ZANU-PF party won a majority of seats in Parliament, the electoral commission said.

“The more the presidenti­al vote is delayed, the more it calls into question the population’s confidence in the election process,” said former Liberian leader Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the lead observer of a US monitoring mission.

“The longer it (the delay in announcing the results of the presidenti­al race), the more the issue of lack of credibilit­y arises,” European Union observer Elmar Brok said. Both the EU and US missions urged the release of the presidenti­al results as soon as possible. The EU mission questioned why presidenti­al votes were counted first but were being announced last. The EU

mission expressed “serious concerns” as representa­tives of Western and other groups gave their first assessment­s of whether the vote was free and fair – crucial for lifting internatio­nal sanctions on the once-prosperous country.

The EU observer mission said “a truly level playing field was not achieved” in the election, pointing out the “misuse of state resources, instances of coercion and intimidati­on, partisan behavior by traditiona­l leaders and overt bias

in state media.” It said the election campaign and voting were largely peaceful in a break from the past

The opposition has alleged irregulari­ties, saying voting results were not posted outside one-fifth of polling stations as required by law.

Mnangagwa’s government has accused Chamisa and his supporters of inciting violence by declaring he had won. “Let me also warn such individual­s and groups that no one is above the law,” home affairs minister Obert Mpofu said.

The violence was an unnerving reminder of the tensions that pervade this southern African nation, debilitate­d by Mugabe’s long, repressive rule.

The 94-year-old former leader had been in power since independen­ce from white minority rule in 1980 until he was forced to resign in November after the military and ruling party turned on him.

Mnangagwa, a former deputy president who fell out with Mugabe and then took over from him, has said his showing in the election was “extremely positive” while urging people to wait for official results.

Chamisa, a lawyer and pastor who leads the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party, has claimed victory based on results supporters said they collected from agents in the field. “We won the popular vote & will defend it!” Chamisa tweeted.

The violence appeared to dash the hopes of Zimbabwean­s that the peaceful vote would lift them out of decades of economic and political stagnation under Mugabe.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 Zimbabwean anti riot police officers close the entrance to Rainbow Towers where the election’s results were announced
PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES 0 Zimbabwean anti riot police officers close the entrance to Rainbow Towers where the election’s results were announced
 ??  ?? 0 A Zimbabwean soldier tackles a man in Harare
0 A Zimbabwean soldier tackles a man in Harare

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