Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Mugabe warned over poll run-off

By Vusumuzi Sifile
POLITICAL commentators and activists have warned President Robert Mugabe against standing in the presidential run-off election due in three weeks, saying a defeat would subject him to “indignity and embarrassment”.
Mugabe will face the MDC’s Morgan Tsvangirai in a run-off election within 21 days after none of the four presidential candidates managed to obtain an absolute majority of the votes cast on 29 March. According to Section 110(3) of the Electoral Act, there should be a run-off election within 21 days featuring the two candidates with the highest number of votes.But following Zanu PF’s defeat in the House of Assembly elections, political analysts believe the results of the run-off would be no different, and have called on Mugabe to withdraw and avoid the possible humiliation of another rout.
Brian Kagoro, a lawyer and civic activist said on Wednesday it was “culturally unwise” for Mugabe to hang on to power.
“It is culturally unwise for grandparents to remain working when there are many young people who are able and willing to do the job,” Kagoro told journalists in Harare. Nkosana Moyo, the former Minister of Industry and International Trade, said in the run-off it was likely that all voters who supported Simba Makoni would support Tsvangirai.
The former Minister of Information, Jonathan Moyo on Wednesday told journalists Zanu PF’s defeat last week marked the start of “the total disintegration of the party”.
“Why should the president, given all he has done for this country, subject himself to such indignity? This is a run-off he cannot win, but it is also a run-off he cannot postpone. In terms of the law, it has to be held within three weeks,” Moyo said.
“The right thing for the president in this situation is to withdraw. If he withdraws, he would have set a remarkable precedent. He must realise that having lost the first round, he cannot win the second. Mugabe and Zanu PF should be gracious in defeat.”
Moyo said the party was now disintegrating “very fast”.
Over the past few days there has been speculation that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC)’s delay in announcing results of last Saturday’s poll was part of a plot to rig the election in Mugabe’s favour. ZEC officials have denied this, saying the delay was caused by the “meticulous verification of results”.

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