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Mugabe Declared Winner of Disputed Election in Zimbabwe Mugabe Wins Again in Zimbabwe, Leaving Rival Greatly Weakened
(about 1 hour later)
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Robert Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since it threw off white rule in 1980, won another term as president after a hotly disputed election held on Wednesday, defeating his main challenger, Morgan Tsvangirai, with 61 percent of the vote, the Zimbabwe Election Commission said Saturday.HARARE, Zimbabwe — Robert Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since it threw off white rule in 1980, won another term as president after a hotly disputed election held on Wednesday, defeating his main challenger, Morgan Tsvangirai, with 61 percent of the vote, the Zimbabwe Election Commission said Saturday.
The results were announced moments after Mr. Tsvangirai denounced the voting, saying it had been rigged.The results were announced moments after Mr. Tsvangirai denounced the voting, saying it had been rigged.
“This fraudulent and stolen election has plunged Zimbabwe into a constitutional, political and economic crisis,” Mr. Tsvangirai said in a news conference at his house. He demanded that a new election be held so that Zimbabweans could “freely and fairly elect a government of their choice.” Mr. Tsvangirai won 33 percent of the vote, the election commission said.
But Rugare Gumbo, a spokesman for Mr. Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF, urged Mr. Tsvangirai to accept the results. Mr. Mugabe’s party also won more than two-thirds of the seats in Parliament, giving it a supermajority that can make changes to the Constitution without the support of any other parties, including Mr. Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change.
It was a stunning comeback for Mr. Mugabe, and the culmination of a long list of missteps and miscalculations that have the left Mr. Tsvangirai’s party, the most credible threat to Mr. Mugabe, with less than a third of the seats in Parliament and few options to contest the election results.
On June 14, when the leaders of the Movement for Democratic Change arrived for a meeting in the Mozambican capital, Maputo, they were outraged. Mr. Mugabe, 89, a wily political survivor, had unilaterally declared that an election must be held by the end of July, usurping Parliament. The party’s leaders were prepared to tell the heads of state who had gathered for the meeting of the regional trade bloc, the Southern African Development Community, that Mr. Tsvangirai’s party would boycott the election.
But the foreign leaders persuaded Mr. Mugabe to agree to ask the country’s constitutional court for a two-week extension, and Mr. Tsvangirai agreed to go ahead with the voting, according to Douglas Mwonzora, the party’s spokesman.
“We didn’t expect the Zimbabwean courts and Mr. Mugabe to go against the resolution of S.A.D.C.,” Mr. Mwonzora said. The courts refused to extend the deadline, and a messy, rushed election was held on July 31. Mr. Tsvangirai responded angrily to the election commission’s announcement on Saturday. “This fraudulent and stolen election has plunged Zimbabwe into a constitutional, political and economic crisis,” he said in a news conference at his house. He demanded that a new election be held so that Zimbabweans could “freely and fairly elect a government of their choice.”
But exactly how this would be achieved is unclear. Mr. Tsvangirai can go to court, which he said he planned to do, but the higher courts in Zimbabwe are filled with Mr. Mugabe’s loyal appointees. Election observers from the African Union have declared the vote peaceful and credible. Regional observers noted problems with the election, but did not dismiss it as unfair.
Rugare Gumbo, a spokesman for Mr. Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF, called on Mr. Tsvangirai to accept the results.
“He must accept the will of the people of Zimbabwe,” Mr. Gumbo said.“He must accept the will of the people of Zimbabwe,” Mr. Gumbo said.
Mr. Tsvangirai won 33 percent of the presidential vote, the election commission said. In 2008, Mr. Mugabe won fewer votes than Mr. Tsvangirai in the first round of that disputed election. Neither man won an outright majority, and Mr. Tsvangirai refused to participate in a runoff because of attacks that killed hundreds of his supporters.
Mr. Mugabe’s party also won more than two-thirds of the seats in Parliament, giving it a supermajority that can make changes to the country’s Constitution without the support of any other parties. The two formed an uneasy unity government after the Southern African trade bloc intervened. That government, which left Mr. Mugabe in place as president and installed Mr. Tsvangirai as prime minister, was supposed to last only 18 months. Instead it stretched on for nearly five years, during which the economy stabilized with the introduction of the United States dollar as the national currency and a new constitution was written and passed in a referendum.
It was a stunning comeback for Mr. Mugabe, who won fewer votes than Mr. Tsvangirai in the first round of the disputed 2008 election. Neither man won an outright majority then, but Mr. Tsvangirai refused to participate in a runoff because of violent attacks that killed hundreds of his supporters. But major overhauls of the armed forces and the police were left undone, and the electoral process ended up being rushed when Mr. Mugabe declared that the vote must be held by July 31.
The two formed an uneasy unity government after the regional trade bloc, the Southern African Development Community, intervened. That government, which left Mr. Mugabe in place as president and installed Mr. Tsvangirai as prime minister, was only supposed to last 18 months. Instead it stretched on for nearly five years, during which the country’s economy stabilized with the introduction of the United States dollar as the national currency. A new constitution was written and passed in a referendum. Almost twice as many people voted in this election than in 2008, and according to the figures released by the election commission, Mr. Mugabe benefited most from the swell of new voters. The total number of votes for him doubled, while Mr. Tsvangirai’s level of support remained the same.
But major overhauls of the armed forces and the police were left undone, and the electoral process ended up being rushed when Mr. Mugabe declared that the vote had to be held by July 31. The voting was peaceful but plagued with problems. The parties did not get a copy of the roll of voters until the day before the election, raising fears of fraud.
The voting was peaceful but plagued with problems. The political parties did not get a copy of the roll of voters until the day before the election, raising fears of fraud. Mr. Tsvangirai said that at one polling place where 17,000 people had voted, 10,000 were assisted by poll workers, a high rate of people needing help in a country with one of Africa’s highest literacy rates. In addition, earlier versions of the voters’ roll had vastly underrepresented young urban voters, a major blow to the opposition party, which counts them as its base. Election observers also noted that far too many extra ballots were printed and too many voters were reported as needing help. Mr. Tsvangirai said that at one constituency where 17,000 people had voted, 10,000 were assisted by poll workers, a high rate of people needing help in a country with one of Africa’s highest literacy rates.
Mr. Tsvangirai now has few options. He can go to court, which he said he planned to do, but the higher courts in Zimbabwe are filled with ZANU-PF loyalists. Despite the problems, the African Union election observers declared that the vote had been peaceful and credible. Regional observers noted problems with the election, but did not dismiss it as too flawed to stand. But analysts say that his party was maneuvered and outfoxed at every turn by a wily survivor who endured colonial rule, a brutal guerrilla war and multiple attempts to unseat him during his 33 years as Zimbabwe’s leader.
The Movement for Democratic Change “has been to blame for ZANU’s success across the board,” said Stephen Chan, a professor at SOAS, University of London, who has written a biography of Mr. Mugabe. “What they got was a compromise deal that was almost worse than being in opposition.”
Top ZANU-PF officials crowed at the size and scale of their victory, dismissing outright the challenger’s assertions that the vote was rigged.
“They are a confused lot,” said Saviour Kasukuwere, a senior ZANU-PF minister, of the challengers. “They are not strategic. They are just a bunch of chancers. Their mantra was ‘Mugabe must go.’ But what else did they offer the people?”
Job Sikala, a leader of one of the breakaway factions of the Movement for Democratic Change that boycotted the vote, said that Mr. Tsvangirai and his fellow leaders had been naïve to expect the election to be fair.
“We noticed that the political playing field was tilted on behalf of ZANU-PF,” Mr. Sikala said. “We knew in advance what the result would be.”
Indeed, by agreeing to a power-sharing government after the 2008 election, which was marred by political violence, the Movement for Democratic Change helped rescue ZANU-PF from its own excesses, Mr. Sikala said, echoing the views of many analysts.
“The day they joined the inclusive government they resuscitated a decomposing, dead donkey,” Mr. Sikala said. “They gave ZANU time and legitimacy to regroup, re-energize and reorganize. Now they are back on top and Tsvangirai is finished.”