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Zimbabwe launches controversial vote recount

Zimbabwe began a partial recount of votes from the March 29 elections on Saturday, despite opposition efforts to block it and widespread fears political stalemate could erupt into violence.
/ Source: Reuters

Zimbabwe began a partial recount of votes from the March 29 elections on Saturday, despite opposition efforts to block it and widespread fears political stalemate could erupt into violence.

Meanwhile, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he would discuss the post-election deadlock with African leaders during a U.N. trade and development conference in Accra, Ghana, that starts on Sunday.

The recount in 23 of 210 constituencies could overturn the results of the parliamentary election, which showed President Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF losing its majority to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change for the first time.

ZANU-PF lost 21 out of those 23 constituencies in the original count. Results of a parallel presidential vote have not been released, but MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai says he has won.

"The vote recounting process has started, and it's going to be a thorough exercise. We expect it to take about three days," a Zimbabwe Electoral Commission official told Reuters. The official, who declined to be named, refused to give any details.

The MDC said it would not accept the outcome of the recount.

"It's not a recount, it's a discount of the will and the vote of the people," MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa told Reuters. "We reject the outcome of this flawed process. The position of the party is we have nothing to do with the process."

A delegation from the 14-nation Southern African Development Community attended the recount, led by South Africa's foreign affairs deputy director-general for Africa, Kingsley Mamabolo. There have been concerns in the West and among the opposition that Mugabe is planning to rig the outcome.

Both President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice have urged African states to take more action to end the post-election deadlock in Zimbabwe.

'Quiet diplomacy'
SADC called last weekend for the outcome to be announced quickly, but African reaction has been subdued overall. The continent has largely taken its cue from South African President Thabo Mbeki, attacked both at home and abroad for his "quiet diplomacy" approach to Mugabe.

A Reuters correspondent at one of the counting stations — in Domboshava rural district about 19 miles north of Harare — said SADC observers and diplomats were present to witness the vote recount.

It is unclear when results of the recount, which includes votes cast in the presidential election, will be issued.

The U.N. chief is in Ghana for the April 20-25 U.N. Conference on Trade and Development, which is likely to focus on high world food prices and is due to be attended by heads of state from Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania and Algeria.

Ban said he would discuss the post-election situation in Zimbabwe and in Kenya and the violence in Sudan's Darfur region with African leaders at the conference, which is also due to be attended by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Petrol bombs
Police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena told the state-controlled Herald newspaper petrol bombs were thrown at offices where ballot boxes for three constituencies in the Gutu rural district were stored early Friday morning, but all failed to explode.

The ruling ZANU-PF triggered the recount after it formally accused election officials of taking bribes to undercount votes for Mugabe and his ruling party and committing other electoral fraud. A number of election officials have been arrested since.

Harare's High Court rejected an MDC bid to block the recount on Friday. The court had previously denied its request to force authorities to release the result of the presidential vote.

165,000 per cent inflation
Opponents accuse the 84-year-old Mugabe of wrecking this once-prosperous country, where the collapse of the economy and inflation of about 165,000 percent have led to chronic shortages of water, food and fuel, and 80 percent unemployment.

The delay in announcing results has given rise to opposition fears the recount could be a government ploy to steal the election. The security of the ballot boxes is a concern that could cloud or even tarnish the recount.

Mugabe, in power since independence from Britain in 1980, has brushed aside criticism from London, Washington and elsewhere and is preparing for an expected run-off against Tsvangirai.

The MDC has accused the former guerrilla commander of unleashing loyal militias to help him rig victory in the runoff and allowing veterans of the independence war to invade some farms, echoing a wave of land invasions that began in 2000.

Human Rights Watch said on Saturday that ZANU-PF was using a network of informal detention centers to beat, torture, and intimidate opposition activists and ordinary Zimbabweans into voting for the ruling party.

On Friday, Mugabe said his government was only interested in peace, and said it had actively intervened to stop the war veterans from taking up arms.

In his first major address since the election, Mugabe went on the attack, accusing former colonial power Britain of paying Zimbabweans to turn against his government.

"Down with the British. Down with thieves who want to steal our country," Mugabe told 15,000 cheering supporters gathered in a stadium on the outskirts of Harare to mark independence day.