The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Zimbabwe opposition rejects ‘fake’ Mnangagwa victory

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ZEC must release proper & verified results endorsed by parties.

HARARE: Zimbabwe’s opposition yesterday rejected what it said were the ‘fake’ results of the landmark election in which President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been declared the winner.

Zimbabwe woke to the news that Mnangagwa, a former ally of Robert Mugabe, had won the historic first polls since the autocrat’s ousting last year with 50.8 per cent of the vote, according to the electoral commission.

The narrow margin is just enough to avoid a run-off against opposition leader Nelson Chamisa that would have been called if Mnangagwa had won less than 50 per cent of the vote.

Chamisa dismissed what he called the election’s ‘unverified fake results’.

“ZEC must release proper & verified results endorsed by parties,” he wrote on Twitter, referring to the Zimbabwe Election Commission.

“The level of opaqueness, truth deficiency, moral decay & values deficit is baffling.”

Mnangagwa, who was chosen as Mugabe’s successor in the ruling ZANU-PF party after he was removed in a brief military interventi­on in November, hailed his victory as a ‘new beginning’ for Zimbabwe.

“Though we may have been divided at the polls, we are united in our dreams,” he said on Twitter.

Opposition allegation­s of foul play had already sparked a deadly crackdown on protesters in the capital Harare on Wednesday when troops opened fire, killing six.

Soldiers and police had cleared the city centre Thursday as the government vowed not to tolerate any more protests, but yesterday the streets were crowded with their usual traffic and commuters were heading to work as normal.

An army truck and water cannon were however parked outside MDC headquarte­rs.

Celebratio­ns by ZANU-PF supporters were also muted, though in the suburb of Mbare music blared from a car covered with party posters.

Analysts EXX Africa said they expected the situation to calm over the next few weeks, with big protests unlikely ‘due to the heavyhande­d security crackdown in the capital and other cities’.

“Despite the mixed response on the elections process from

Nelson Chamisa, opposition leader

internatio­nal observers, there is little actual evidence to demonstrat­e the opposition’s claims of mass vote tampering,” they said in a briefing note.

“Over the next few weeks, the fall-out over the elections will subside and allow the government to begin to repair its tarnished reputation in order to secure fresh investment­s and debt relief,” they predicted.

Since independen­ce from Britain in 1980, Zimbabwe has known only two presidents -- Mugabe, who ruled with an iron fist for 37 years, and his erstwhile right-hand man Mnangagwa, who was appointed after Mugabe was forced out by the military in November last year.

The new president had promised a free and fair vote that would turn the page on years of brutal repression under Mugabe, end Zimbabwe’s internatio­nal isolation and attract foreign investment to revive the shattered economy.

But Chamisa has repeatedly alleged that the vote was rigged, charging that the ZEC - synonymous with fraud under Mugabe -- had again helped ZANUPF to steal an election.

An MDC spokesman said early yesterday that the party was planning to take the outcome to the courts. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Supporters of Mnangagwa celebrate in Mbare, Harare. — AFP photo
Supporters of Mnangagwa celebrate in Mbare, Harare. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Nelson Chamisa
Nelson Chamisa

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