Home page.
| Home
Ireland: Get to grips with the top stories from home World: Reports from around the world Irish and international sport, soccer, Gaa Business: The latest business news and features Opinion: You may not like what you read... Property Breaking news: News and sport as they happen Week in news: Catch up with the week's news
 Home » Breaking News » World » First Zimbabwe election recount goes to Mugabe


 

First Zimbabwe election recount goes to Mugabe
23/04/2008 - 13:20:32

The first result in a recount of 23 seats in Zimbabwe’s parliamentary elections gave victory to president Robert Mugabe’s ruling party today.

The recount in a Harare suburb was the only one demanded by the opposition MDC party.

The results showed just a one-vote difference from the original count from the poll giving the seat to Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party with 6,194 votes to 5,931 for the MDC.

No further results from the recount were released. Most of the other seats involved were won by the MDC and the recount could prove pivotal for the ruling party which lost control of parliament for the first time by a small margin.

Presidential results from the March 29 election – which opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai is widely believed to have won – have still to be released.

Meanwhile the state mouthpiece Herald newspaper raised the first prospect of a “unity government”, seen as preparing the ground for Mugabe to stay in control and perhaps even the scrapping of the March presidential election ahead of a new ballot.

Columnist Obediah Mazombwe called a unity government negotiated by regional leaders of the 14-nation Southern African Development Community as “the most viable and safest way forward.”

He said regional leaders, along with “the progressive international community,” could bring together key players: Mugabe’s party, the opposition, the UK and the US.



“The situation in Zimbabwe is dire, but all is not lost. Whilst the ruling party must stop behaving like a wounded buffalo, the opposition must stop its hysterics and lapses into delusion,” he said.

“The West, particularly the Anglo-American establishment, should stop insisting that President Mugabe and ZANU-PF cannot be part of a future prosperous Zimbabwe,” he said.

Under a transitional arrangement, the resumption of critical Western financial assistance could be negotiated, Mazombwe said.

Mr Tsvangirai and other opposition leaders, now in “virtual exile,” should be guaranteed their safety and “come home and start playing a constructive national role.”

A unity government would then be expected to reform the nation’s constitution and organise fresh elections under regional and international supervision, he said.

Mr Tsvangirai’s insists the MDC won the polls outright and has rejected earlier calls by independent civic groups for an alliance with Mugabe to break the month-long political deadlock.

Mr Tsvangirai today met Mozambican ex-President Joaquim Chissano and opposition leader Afonso Dhlakama as part of his tour of the continent to rally support among African leaders and increase pressure on Mugabe to concede defeat.

South African President Thabo Mbeki – appointed by regional leaders as the chief mediator on Zimbabwe – has come under increasing criticism for his refusal to take a stronger stance on Mugabe.

           

Related Stories:
21/08/2008: Mugabe to convene Zimbabwe parliament
21/07/2008: Mugabe 'agrees to power-sharing talks'
12/07/2008: Russia and China destroy Mugabe sanctions bid
11/07/2008: Zimbabwe: Opposition claims 113 supporters have been killed
11/07/2008: Zimbabwe opposition sets conditions for more talks
10/07/2008: Talks between Zimbabwean factions 'have resumed'
09/07/2008: Mugabe 'ready to form unity govt'
08/07/2008: Opposition denies Mugabe party talks
05/07/2008: Mugabe back in Zimbabwe
03/07/2008: Zimbabwe: 200 seek refuge at US embassy
02/07/2008: Tsvangirai demands new mediator for unity talks
02/07/2008: US calls for Mugabe sanctions
02/07/2008: EU makes Tsvangirai call
01/07/2008: Mugabe's aide tells critics to 'go hang'
01/07/2008: Mugabe's aide shrugs off poll criticism
01/07/2008: Tsvangirai leaves Dutch Embassy
30/06/2008: African leaders greet Mugabe with hugs
30/06/2008: Mugabe supporters attack farmers
30/06/2008: Mugabe seeks credibility at African summit
30/06/2008: Mugabe under pressure to agree power-sharing deal







 
© Thomas Crosbie Media. 2008.