the head of state clings to power, the opposition cries fraud

Zimbabweans voted Wednesday, August 23, in relative calm but without illusions while the opposition denounces “frauds” And “impediments” which would have marred the presidential and legislative elections. “We are clearly dealing with hindrances leading to voter suppression, a classic case of archaic cheating dating from the Stone Age”denounced opponent and candidate Nelson Chamisa, 45-year-old lawyer and pastor, to the press.

In the capital, Harare, a stronghold of the opposition, chaos has taken hold of several offices, which have been delayed in opening due to “logistical delays”. And the president had to announce in the evening that the ballot would be extended by one day, to allow the 6.6 million voters to vote. The Electoral Commission (ZEC) acknowledged that less than a quarter of the offices in the capital were able to open at 7 a.m. as planned.

In the Kambuzuma district, Linda Phiri, 53, who arrived at dawn, was in the throes of exasperation in the afternoon, when no ballot had yet been cast. “I sleep here if necessary. I’m not coming home”she enraged with AFP. “We were told that the ballots were being printed, it’s a bad joke”sighs Boasz, a 37-year-old nurse who does not want to give his name. “They seek to defraud”whistles between his teeth Chrispen Marambakuwanda, a 45-year-old unemployed man.

Fears on the counting

At a time when most polling stations were closing, and even beginning to count, at least one of them, in a disadvantaged area of ​​Harare, was just beginning to vote, AFP found.

The opposition united within the Coalition of Citizens for Change (CCC), strongly established in the cities, was counting on a protest vote anchored in a growing discontent linked to a stricken economy, between record unemployment and hyperinflation.

The electoral campaign had already been marked by an indiscriminate repression of the opposition and serious irregularities in the electoral lists, noted by NGOs.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Zanu-PF party, in power since independence in 1980 of this landlocked southern African country, seem determined to cling to power.

Read also: In Zimbabwe, a presidential election in a tense political and economic context

Nelson Chamisa denounced a deliberate desire by the ruling party to “create confusion to cover the tracks”. Zanu-PF “is in despair, these are the last kicks of a dying horse. It’s not a political party, it’s a mafia.struck this slender man with a fine mustache, at the end of the day. “We want peace, but there is a limit”he added, warning that he would not allow a rerun of the 2018 elections, the result of which he had contested, without success.

In Kwekwe (center), the outgoing president, 80, dyed hair and scarf in the colors of the country, voted surrounded by supporters. “With my vote, I hope that the town hall will give me a good job”commented Freddy Kondowe, an unemployed man in his forties.

“Very strong turnout”

The results must be published within five days of the ballot. The CCC welcomed a “very high turnout”. But his spokesperson, Fadzayi Mahere, reported maneuvers by Zanu-PF supporters, who arrived in some offices on the pretext of exit polls, to sow fear and incite people to vote for power. “The Panic Diet”, she said. False posters were also distributed, but “Citizens will not be fooled”.

The day before, government spokesman Nick Mangwana told AFP that he hoped “every Zimbabwean accepts the choice of the people”. As if the chips were down. The president has tirelessly promised a fair election. But “Zanu-PF is unstoppable. Victory is certain”he repeated again on Saturday.

Read also: Presidential election in Zimbabwe: the dashed hopes of the post-Mugabe period

After months of campaigning biased against the opposition, few believe in the chances of ” young man “ Nelson Chamisa.

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Human Rights Watch predicted a “seriously flawed electoral process”. And opposition as observers now fear fraud when counting the ballots. These concerns are “the fruit of an overflowing imagination”had swept Tuesday with AFP Rodney Kiwa, vice-president of the ZEC.

The World with AFP

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