Los Angeles Times

Zimbabwe victor named

Election commission says president won, despite a rival’s claim. A standoff is expected.

- By Krista Mahr Mahr is a special correspond­ent.

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been declared the winner in Zimbabwe’s historic election, with the deaths of six people during a military crackdown on demonstrat­ors casting a shadow over the victory for his party that has governed the country for nearly 40 years.

Mnangagwa, a 75-yearold veteran of Zimbabwe’s liberation war during which he earned the nickname the “Crocodile,” was appointed by the ruling ZANU-PF party to lead the government in November after strongman Robert Mugabe was ousted by his military.

Zimbabwe’s electoral commission declared Thursday night that Mnangagwa had won just over 50% of the vote, setting the stage for a potential standoff with opposition leader Nelson Chamisa, who had claimed victory based on his party’s own tallies.

Chamisa had said his Movement for Democratic Change party planned to reject any announceme­nt of a Mnangagwa win as fraudulent. The electoral commission reported that Mnangagwa’s earned 50.8% of the vote and that Chamisa’s share was 44.3%.

The win for the ruling party came a day after the army opened fire on opposition supporters in downtown Harare, the capital, killing six people and throwing into question promises from both candidates that this election was finally the beginning of a “new era” in Zimbabwe.

Zimbabwe’s elections have been routinely marred by violence and an atmosphere of fear and intimidati­on, which many hoped had changed after polling went peacefully Monday. Businesses in downtown Harare were shut Thursday as security forces patrolled the streets.

Mnangagwa’s supporters say his experience fighting in the liberation war and his decades working in government have given him the experience needed to lead the nation out of its morass. He has pledged to end Zimbabwe’s decades of isolation and woo investors to boost the bedraggled economy under the tag line “Zimbabwe is open for business.”

But his critics allege he has been a key part of Mugabe’s autocratic machinery that perpetrate­d political violence, particular­ly as head of security in the 1980s when as many as 20,000 people were killed in a covert operation to root out political dissidents, and has suppressed political freedom in a series of allegedly rigged polls.

The swift use of deadly force to quell protests Wednesday served as a stark warning that, despite the unusually free atmosphere of Monday’s polls, Mnangagwa’s government is unlikely to tolerate mass demonstrat­ions against the election results.

Police raided the opposition’s headquarte­rs downtown Thursday, seizing computers and arresting 18 people.

All eyes will now be on Chamisa, who claimed earlier in the day that the government delayed announcing the presidenti­al results to “massage” the numbers.

“We know the results,” he said during a news conference. “Clearly if the results are not agreeing with the will of the people it will be rejected… People know what they voted, and they definitely did not vote for Emmerson Mnangagwa in this election.”

Wednesday’s show of force — despite the presence of dozens of foreign observers invited to monitor elections for the first time since 2002 — throws into question whether Mnangagwa will be able to successful­ly reengage with the internatio­nal community whose help is needed to revive the nation’s economy.

Mnangagwa, after making a short televised statement on Wednesday night blaming the opposition for the unrest, offered condolence­s to victims’ families Thursday and called for national unity and an “independen­t investigat­ion” into the days’ events.

Nine internatio­nal election observer missions issued a statement Thursday denouncing the excessive use of force to disperse protesters. “We encourage political leaders to show magnanimit­y in victory and graciousne­ss in defeat,” it said.

American and European monitors, in their preliminar­y reviews of the vote, said that the polls were peaceful and that the election environmen­t was better than in past years, but noted several problems with the process, including the distributi­on of food aid to the ruling party members, voter intimidati­on and overt state media bias toward the ruling party.

“Mnangagwa is going to face a deeply divided country,” said Piers Pigou, an analyst with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. “The vast majority of Zimbabwean­s will just be happy this is past them.”

President ‘Mnangagwa is going to face a deeply divided country.’ — Piers Pigou, analyst with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group

 ?? Mujahid Safodien Associated Press ?? POLICE RAID the offices of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in Harare. Officials accused the party of inciting violence, but foreign observers said the military used excessive force against protesters.
Mujahid Safodien Associated Press POLICE RAID the offices of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in Harare. Officials accused the party of inciting violence, but foreign observers said the military used excessive force against protesters.

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