Zimbabwe election challenge

! This post hasn't been updated in over a year. A lot can change in a year including my opinion and the amount of naughty words I use. There's a good chance that there's something in what's written below that someone will find objectionable. That's fine, if I tried to please everybody all of the time then I'd be a Lib Dem (remember them?) and I'm certainly not one of those. The point is, I'm not the kind of person to try and alter history in case I said something in the past that someone can use against me in the future but just remember that the person I was then isn't the person I am now nor the person I'll be in a year's time.

ZanuPF and the MDC have both filed petitions with the Zimbabwean Electoral Court challenging the results of a total of 105 results from the recent elections.

MPs will still be sworn in and the government – such as it is – will continue whilst the Electoral Court rules on the results.

There is only one way that this is ever going to get resolved satisfactorily and that is by re-running the election with UN election monitors.

There is a suggestion that Morgan Tsvangirai might not stand in a presidential election re-run because MDC believe he won outright but I’m not sure what that would achieve.  He may believe he won outright – he probably did – but why not just go through the motions and win the run-off?  At least then Mugabe has no reason to cling on to power like he is now.

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5 comments

  1. Charlie Marks (365 comments) says:

    In Kenya a similar (but crucially different) disputed election was successfully resolved through power-sharing. The old president clinging to power in Kenya had the backing of the World Bank, so there wasn’t a lot of media demonisation – despite similar violent reprisals…

    Why won’t Tsvangirai’s MDC go through the motions? Well,
    they’ve probably been instructed not to by the US/UK governments who don’t want power-sharing – they want Zanu-PF out of power completely because it is committed to a programme of land reform and the indigenisation (creating a native upper class at the expense of foreign owners of capital).

  2. axel (1214 comments) says:

    Or maybe they want to leave to rot as a startiling memorial to how well left wing economic/communist policies work in the real world?

  3. axel (1214 comments) says:

    I think, however, the major point we are all missing out on is distance, Zimbabwe is miles from the sea and good transport.

    I think we forget how big Africa is, when we see a map of it in TV and then in the next minute, we see a map of Britain, it stilts our perspective.

  4. wonkotsane (1133 comments) says:

    Yeah but the French could get us in through Mozambique I’m sure.

  5. axel (1214 comments) says:

    No, you are missing out the whole scale of the place, going via mozambique is worse than you going to Germany via Bordeuax!

    Zimbabwe is almost twice the size of Britain

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