San Francisco Chronicle

Voters hopeful election will mark beginning of new era

- By Christophe­r Torchia and Farai Mutsaka Christophe­r Torchia and Farai Mutsaka are Associated Press writers.

HARARE, Zimbabwe — With hope and pride, millions of Zimbabwean­s voted peacefully Monday in an election that many believe is their best chance to escape the toxic politics and dead-end economics of the era of Robert Mugabe, who wasn’t on the ballot for the first time in the nation’s nearly four-decade history.

But opposition activists used to the violence, intimidati­on and vote-tampering that marred elections under Mugabe called for vigilance against the same kind of abuses this time around. Western monitors noted some problems at polling stations, but said it wasn’t yet clear whether they reflected a deliberate effort to manipulate the elections.

“They may be peaceful, but we don’t know how credible they are,” said Classified Chivese, a voter who, like many Zimbabwean­s, is unemployed.

Zimbabwe’s political climate has opened up since 94-yearold Mugabe, who once said he would rule for life, resigned in November after a military takeover and ruling party move to impeach him. Throngs celebrated the removal of Mugabe, in power since independen­ce from white minority rule in 1980, but many Zimbabwean­s view Monday’s election as an equally important milestone.

More than 5.5 million people were registered to vote in an election featuring more than 20 presidenti­al candidates and nearly 130 political parties vying for parliament­ary seats. If no presidenti­al candidate wins more than 50 percent of the vote, a runoff will be held Sept. 8.

The two main contenders were President Emmerson Mnangagwa, 75, a former deputy president and longtime enforcer for Mugabe who has reinvented himself as a candidate for change; and Nelson Chamisa, 40, a lawyer and pastor who became head of the main opposition party a few months ago after the death of its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai.

After polls closed at 7 p.m. and vote-counting began, Mnangagwa appealed to Zimbabwean­s to be patient and wait for the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to announce results. The final, official tally is expected within five days.

“Today, Zimbabwe experience­d a beautiful expression of freedom & democracy,” Mnangagwa tweeted. “No matter which way we voted, we are all brothers and sisters.”

Earlier, however, Chamisa said on Twitter that voting delays in urban areas, where his support is strong, were a “deliberate attempt” to undermine his election bid.

The head of the European Union mission monitoring the election said his team saw “huge difference­s” in the pace of voting at polling stations. Voters at one location waited less than an hour to cast their ballots while others at a nearby station waited more than half the day, Elmar Brok said.

 ?? Bram Janssen / Associated Press ?? An aerial view shows people waiting in lines to cast their ballots at an election polling station in the capital of Harare.
Bram Janssen / Associated Press An aerial view shows people waiting in lines to cast their ballots at an election polling station in the capital of Harare.

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