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FINAL PUSH IN ZIMBABWE ELECTION !

posted Friday, 28 March 2008
Robert Mugabe and wife Grace campaign on 27 March
Mr Mugabe and wife Grace push for votes in Harare
A final day of campaigning has begun in Zimbabwe's general election, amid opposition fears of widespread vote-rigging in Saturday's poll.

The two main rivals to President Robert Mugabe, Morgan Tsvangirai and Simba Makoni, have said there are severe discrepancies in voter lists.

Mr Mugabe insists the vote is fair and everyone should abide by the results. There have been few reliable opinion polls. A candidate must win 50% of the presidential vote to avoid a run-off.

Mr Mugabe, 84, has led the country since independence in 1980.

Mr Tsvangirai, head of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, and Mr Makoni, an ex-finance minister and independent candidate, on Thursday issued a joint statement expressing severe concerns about the poll.

OPPOSITION POLL CONCERNS
Surplus ballot papers printed
Tens of thousands of "ghost voters"
Police allowed inside polling stations
More polling stations in rural areas
State media bias
Food aid only given to Zanu-PF supporters
Chiefs used to campaign for Zanu-PF

They said they had still not received full nationwide voters' lists that could be verified.

They also believe there has been an unexplained increase in voter registration in rural areas where Mr Mugabe is strongest.

But campaigning has been relatively peaceful, with none of the widespread intimidation of opposition activists seen in recent polls.

Both Mr Makoni and Mr Tsvangirai have been able to hold rallies across the country. The BBC's Southern Africa correspondent, Peter Biles, says another major worry is that there may not be enough polling stations in urban areas. He says there is also concern about equal access to the media.

Simba Makoni supporters in Harare, 26 Mar
The Makoni campaign has targeted the economy

Noel Kututwa, chairman of the independent Zimbabwe Election Support Network, said: "The opposition has only now been able to advertise on the television and in the newspapers, after the first foreign observers arrived.

"So it's only two weeks now that you are getting [a more open media]."

The foreign observers are only from nations the Zimbabwean government considers "friendly", and the West has been largely barred. The government has accused Britain and the US of already having decided that the elections will not be free and fair. It also accuses the MDC of introducing the language of "election rigging" in the country.

A total of 5.9 million people are eligible to vote in Saturday's joint local, senate, assembly and presidential polls.

 

It's a country without hope with a dictator who will stop at nothing to remain in power.

Barry Verona, Ex pat - now Canada

The opposition has been campaigning on Zimbabwe's economic crisis - it has the world's highest rate at more than 100,000% and just one adult in five are believed to have regular jobs.

Mr Makoni, who left the government in 2002, said repairing the economy would be a long task.

"This is not about the first six months after March 29 or even the first five years... it could range from 10 to 15 years," he told AFP news agency.

But Mr Mugabe says land and control of economic resources are the main issues. He blames a Western plot for the economic troubles.

"The British, the Americans... would rather see our children, the old and the infirm suffer under the weight of their evil sanctions they have imposed as part of their desire to effect the regime change in our country," he said on Thursday.

He also warned his opponents not to protest if they did not win the elections. "Just dare try it," said Mr Mugabe at one of his final campaign rallies. "We don't play around while you try to please your British allies."

BBC NEWS REPORT.


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