Las Vegas Review-Journal

Zimbabwe opposition claims election fraud

Observers cite issues as party’s rule extends

- By Farai Mutsaka and Gerald Imray

Zimbabwe’s main opposition leader Sunday alleged “blatant and gigantic fraud” in the country’s election after President Emmerson Mnangagwa was declared the winner and internatio­nal observers reported an atmosphere of intimidati­on against voters.

The returns from the latest troubled vote in the southern African nation were announced Saturday night, two days earlier than expected. Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa’s Citizens Coalition for Change party said it would challenge the results as “hastily assembled without proper verificati­on.”

“They stole your voice and vote but never your hope,” Chamisa wrote in a post on X in his first public reaction to the election’s announced outcome. “It’s a blatant and gigantic fraud.”

People in the country of 15 million were bound to view the results with suspicion but Mnangagwa, 80, dismissed allegation­s of vote fraud.

“I did not conduct these elections. I think those who feel the race was not run properly know where to go to complain. I am so happy,” he said at a news conference Sunday, adding that the elections were run “transparen­tly, fairly in broad daylight.”

Mnangagwa was re-elected for a second five-year term with 52.6 percent of the vote, according to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission. Chamisa, 45, who also lost to Mnangagwa in a very close and disputed election five years ago, won 44 percent of the vote this time, the commission said.

Internatio­nal election observers have noted problems with the election, held Wednesday and Thursday, citing an atmosphere of intimidati­on against Chamisa’s supporters. In the buildup to the vote, internatio­nal rights groups reported a crackdown on opposition to Mnangagwa and the long-ruling ZANU-PF party.

“The vote will be challenged, it was fraught with unpreceden­ted illegality,” Chamisa said later Sunday in the capital, Harare. he described the results as “doctored” and “criminal.”

The rights groups said the party, which according to the electoral commission retained its parliament­ary majority, had used the police and courts to harass and intimidate opposition officials and supporters.

Voting was extended into an extra day Thursday because of a shortage of ballot papers, especially in the capital and other urban areas that are opposition stronghold­s.

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