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October 07, 2008 | 14:14:22
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ZIMBABWE ELECTIONS

Zimbabwe's opposition defeats Mugabe

04/02/2008

Party Secretary-General Tendai Biti said Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai had won 50.3 percent of the vote and Mugabe 43.8 percent.
President Robert Mugabe. Photo: EFE

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President Robert Mugabe. Photo: EFE

Zimbabwe's opposition said on Wednesday it had defeated veteran President Robert Mugabe in both presidential and parliamentary elections, but would accept a runoff vote.

Party Secretary-General Tendai Biti told a news conference that tallies based on totals posted outside polling stations showed Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai had won 50.3 percent of the vote and Mugabe 43.8 percent.

Biti said a second round runoff was not necessary but the MDC would accept one "under protest". Election rules say any candidate needs an absolute majority for an outright first round victory.

Biti appealed to Mugabe, president for the last 28 years, to concede defeat and avoid "embarrassment". Mugabe, 84, faced an unprecedented challenge in Saturday's elections because of the economic collapse of his once prosperous country.

Mugabe's government immediately rejected the MDC victory claim as "mischievous".

Deputy Information Minister Bright Matonga told Sky television: "President Mugabe is going nowhere. We are not going to be pressurised into anything".

The government has warned that victory claims before an official result would be regarded as a coup d'etat.

Matonga said in a telephone interview with Sky: "No-one is panicking around President Mugabe. The army is very solidly behind our president, the police force as well". He added: "We are not going to be rushed by anybody. They can make statements left right and centre, but they are merely wasting their time".

No official results of the presidential poll have been issued four days after the election and Mugabe has not been seen in public since voting, despite speculation he would make a television address on Tuesday night.

Biti said MDC tallies showed it had also won the parliamentary vote, taking 99 seats to the ruling ZANU-PF's 96.

The latest official results gave ZANU-PF 93 seats to 91 for the MDC with five for a breakaway opposition faction.

Biti's announcement indicated a change in the MDC position in accepting a second round runoff against Mugabe. Tsvangirai said on Tuesday he had won outright.

Runoff

Mugabe's government appears to have been preparing the population for a runoff by revealing its own projections showing a second round would be required in the statutory three weeks after last Saturday's vote.

Both Tsvangirai and the government have dismissed widespread speculation that the MDC was negotiating with ZANU-PF for a managed exit for Mugabe, who has ruled uninterrupted since independence from Britain in 1980.

The state-owned Herald newspaper said on Wednesday MDC and ZANU-PF would tie in the parliamentary poll and projections for the presidential election showed Mugabe would fail to win an

The prospect of a runoff has raised fears both inside and outside Zimbabwe that the hiatus before a new vote would spark serious violence between security forces and militia loyal to Mugabe on one side and MDC supporters on the other.

he Herald also said the government had decided to immediately implement tax relief to cushion the effect of runaway inflation, officially over 100,000 percent but estimated to be much higher, the world's highest rate.

The widening of workers' tax-free threshold tenfold to 300 million Zimbabwean dollars per month, $10,000 at the government's official rate but about $7.50 on the black market, is widely seen as an attempt to curry favour with voters and suggests ZANU-PF is preparing for a runoff.

A senior Western diplomat in Harare told Reuters the international community was discussing ideas to try to persuade Mugabe to step down, "but I don't think there is anything firm on the table".

The opposition and international observers said Mugabe rigged the last presidential election in 2002. But some analysts say the groundswell of discontent over the economy is too great for him to fix the result this time without risking major unrest.

Apart from surreal inflation of more than 100,000 percent and a virtually worthless currency, Zimbabweans are suffering food and fuel shortages and an HIV/AIDS epidemic that has contributed to a steep drop in life expectancy.

The opposition, including former Finance Minister Simba Makoni, who stood as a third candidate, is expected to unite behind Tsvangirai if there is a runoff.

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