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Zimbabwe's Tsvangirai acts
presidential
Harare -
Morgan Tsvangirai acts as if he has already been declared Zimbabwe's
president.
"For years we have trod a journey
of hunger, pain, torture and brutality," he told reporters in his
first public comments since Saturday's elections.
"Today we face a new challenge of
governing and rehabilitating our beloved country, the challenge of
giving birth to a new Zimbabwe founded on restoration not
retribution, on love not war."
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
has yet to release returns from the presidential vote, but
Tsvangirai insists he defeated President Robert Mugabe. And he
denied reports that he was negotiating to ease out Mugabe, who has
led the country from liberation to economic collapse over the past
28 years.
Tsvangirai
said Tuesday he was waiting for an official announcement of the
results before he would enter talks with Mugabe. But he asserted
that he got more than the 50 percent simple majority needed for
victory.
Mugabe,
84, has made no statement about the election.
Tensions rose as the days passed
without an official announcement on the presidential vote, and some
people stayed home from work. A senior police officer, Wayne
Bvudzijena, went on state radio to say: "Our forces are more than
ready to deal with perpetrators of violence."
Paramilitary police have stepped up
patrols in the capital, Harare, and in Bulawayo, the second-largest
city, and roadblocks have been set up at strategic entries to
Harare. The opposition has most of its support in urban centers.
As Zimbabweans waited for the
returns, "our country is on a precipice, on a cliff edge," said
Tsvangirai, head of the Movement for Democratic Change.
In Washington, Gordon Johndroe,
spokesman for the National Security Council, said "it's clear the
people of Zimbabwe have voted for change. It's time for the
Zimbabwean Electoral Commission to confirm the results we have all
seen from the local polling stations and respected NGOs."
The Zimbabwe Election Support
Network, a coalition of 38 Zimbabwe civil society organizations,
said its random representative sample of polling stations showed
Tsvangirai won just over 49 percent of the vote and Mugabe 42
percent. Simba Makoni, a former Mugabe loyalist, trailed at about 8
percent.
On Tuesday, a businessman close to
the state electoral commission and a lawyer close to the opposition
said aides to Tsvangirai and Mugabe were negotiating a graceful exit
for the president. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the issue.
However, Tsvangirai said "there are
no discussions," adding, "let's wait for ZEC to complete its work."
The businessman said Mugabe has
been told he is far behind Tsvangirai in preliminary results and
that he might have to face a runoff. He said the prospect was
humiliating for Mugabe, and that was why the president was
considering ceding power.
The situation remained fragile and
could deteriorate without a Mugabe resignation.
Martin Rupiya, a military analyst
at South Africa's Institute for Strategic Studies and a former
lieutenant-colonel in the Zimbabwe army, said he had heard of the
military's involvement in negotiations for Mugabe to step down.
The election result "has compelled
the military, the hawkish wing and the other moderate, to begin to
reconsider accommodating the opposition," he said. "Because of the
nature of the wins they have been forced to reassess."
Political analyst John Makumbe said
he had learned from military sources that they would respect the
results of the elections. Last week, security chiefs had warned they
would not serve anyone but Mugabe and would not tolerate an
opposition victory.
The Electoral Commission has
released results for 182 of the 210 parliamentary seats — giving
Tsvangirai's party 92 seats, including five for a breakaway faction,
to 90 for Mugabe's ruling party. At least six Cabinet ministers lost
their seats, according to the official results.
Zimbabweans fear that Mugabe may
declare himself the winner, as he has in previous elections that
observers said were marked by rigging, violence and intimidation.
Should he consider stepping down,
he would have to weigh the concerns of those who have profited from
his patronage, including military leaders, party officials and
businesspeople. They have received mining concessions, construction
contracts and preferential licenses to run transport companies and
other businesses.
Marwick Khumalo, head of the
Pan-African Parliament observer mission, told South African radio
that leading members of Mugabe's party were contemplating defeat
with trepidation.
"I was talking to some of the
bigwigs in the ruling party and they also are concerned about the
possibility of a change of guard," he said. "ZANU-PF has actually
been institutionalized in the lives of Zimbabweans, so it is not
easy for anyone within the sphere of the ruling party to accept that
'Maybe we might be defeated or might have been defeated.'"
At independence, Mugabe was hailed
for his policies of racial reconciliation and development that
brought education and health to millions who had been denied those
services under colonial rule. Zimbabwe's economy thrived on exports
of food, minerals and tobacco.
The unraveling began when Mugabe
ordered the often-violent seizures of white-owned commercial farms,
ostensibly to return them to the landless black majority. Instead,
Mugabe replaced a white elite with a black one, giving the farms to
relatives, friends and cronies who allowed cultivated fields to be
taken over by weeds.
Today, a third of the population
depends on imported food handouts. Another third has fled the
country as economic and political refugees, and 80 percent have no
jobs. Life expectancy has fallen from 60 years to 35, and shortages
of food, medicine, water, electricity and fuel are chronic.
The economy is in dramatically
worse shape than in past elections, with inflation now the highest
in the world. -- Associated
Press
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