Friday, May 2, 2008

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Zimbabwe opposition willing to share power with ruling party
By ANGUS SHAW Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - Zimbabwe's opposition said Friday it was willing to share power with the ruling party, but not with longtime President Robert Mugabe.

Left unresolved was whether a runoff election would be held. Mugabe said he was willing to take part in a second round of voting after official results showed him in second place.

However, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change was cool to the idea, saying a runoff could not be held now in a climate of violence and repression.

Earlier in the day, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission released results from the March 29 presidential election that showed opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai winning the most votes, but not the simple majority needed to avoid a runoff with Mugabe, the second-place finisher.

Tsvangirai's deputy in the Movement for Democratic Change, Tendai Biti, acknowledged at a news conference that skipping a second round is a gamble that could result in another term for the 84-year-old Mugabe, who ruled since Zimbabwe's independence in 1980.

Biti would not, as party leaders have done before, categorically rule out participating in a runoff, but said there could not be one "for the simple and good reasons that that country is burning" amid violence and an economic collapse from rampant inflation.

The opposition maintains that a tally giving Tsvangirai anything but outright victory is fraudulent.

"Morgan Tsvangirai should be allowed to form a government of national healing that includes all Zimbabwean stakeholders," Biti told reporters in Johannesburg, South Africa. "The only condition we give ... is that President Mugabe must immediately concede."

He said the party's top decision-making body would meet Saturday to decide its next step, and that Tsvangirai would hold a news conference soon.

Biti said Mugabe's safety and that of his family and his assets would be guaranteed, and suggested that he, like other former African leaders, should look to a future of retirement or as a respected statesman mediating in regional crises.

At a news conference in Harare, top Mugabe aide Emmerson Mnangagwa said the president has accepted the outcome and will run in the second round of balloting.

Independent observers had said earlier that Tsvangirai won the most votes, but not the 50 percent plus one vote needed to avoid a runoff.

Mnangagwa countered that it was the opposition that was responsible for election fraud and violence, and accused the United States, Britain and Australia of supporting the MDC. Many of his accusations seemed to echo charges laid against his own party, with the MDC substituted for ZANU-PF.

His version contrasted sharply with independent reports indicating the MDC, up against a ruling party that can call on the army and armed militants, was too weak to run a political campaign - let alone a violent uprising or mass electoral fraud.

"ZANU-PF and all its candidates, especially its presidential candidate, feel aggrieved and were greatly prejudiced by the attempt by the MDC and its sponsors to tamper with the electoral system," Mnangagwa said.

But he added: "The ZANU-PF presidential candidate, comrade R.G. Mugabe, accepts the results as announced and is offering himself for election in the presidential runoff whose date has yet to be announced."

Deputy Information Minister Bright Matonga said the constitution requires a second round no sooner than 21 days from the announcement of the results.

The opposition is under enormous pressure, with its supporters facing violence and most of its top leaders, including Biti and Tsvangirai, staying out of Zimbabwe for fear of arrest. The opposition and independent rights groups accuse Mugabe of having held back results for more than a month in order to orchestrate a campaign of violence and intimidation to cow voters ahead of any runoff.

In Washington, the U.S. questioned whether a runoff could be free and fair.

"The bottom line is, it's pretty hard to see how there could be a meaningful runoff in Zimbabwe when the government has done everything it can to both delay and obscure the results," said State Department spokesman Tom Casey.

"If you did actually hold a runoff, it is a little hard for people to take it seriously, when the government of Zimbabwe is busy harassing, repressing, arresting and abusing the members of the opposition."

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said it was clear Mugabe lost the presidential election.

"His campaign of violence and intimidation over the last month must stop immediately," Miliband said in a statement issued in London. "Any second round must be free, fair and open to international monitors. We will continue to support those working for democracy in Zimbabwe and regional and international partners committed to change."

Mugabe has kept a stranglehold on power in recent years through elections that independent observers say were marred by fraud, intimidation and rigging.

He has been accused of brutality and increasing autocracy. But the main campaign issue for many here had been the economic ruin of what had once been a regional breadbasket.

The collapse of the agriculture-based economy has been linked to a land reform campaign Mugabe launched in 2000 that saw the often violent seizure of farmland from whites. Mugabe claimed the program was to benefit poor blacks, but much of the land was handed over to his cronies.

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Reuters.com - Mugabe to contest Zimbabwe run-off, MDC cries foul

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 Mugabe to contest Zimbabwe run-off, MDC cries foul
Fri May 02 21:05:04 UTC 2008

By Nelson Banya

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe accepted that the opposition's Morgan Tsvangirai won more votes in the presidential election and will contest a run-off in a political battle that has raised fears of bloodshed.

Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) cried foul after Zimbabwe's electoral body announced on Friday that he had won 47.9 percent of the vote but faces a run-off after failing to gain enough votes for an outright majority.

The MDC described the announcement of the long-delayed result as "scandalous daylight robbery". It says Tsvangirai won more than 50 percent of the vote in the March 29 election and Mugabe's 28-year rule is over.

But Mugabe's old foe has few options. If Tsvangirai refuses to take part in a second round, Mugabe would keep his hold on power according to electoral law. The MDC said it would decide at the weekend whether to contest a run-off.

An aide to Mugabe said the president accepted the result of the first round and would contest a run-off.

"The presidential result as announced do not reflect the genuine expression of the will of the Zimbabwean people given the many anomalies, malpractices, deflation of figures relating to ZANU-PF candidates," chief election agent Emmerson Mnangagwa told reporters.

Western powers expressed doubt that a run-off could be fair.

"For any second round of the presidential election to be considered free and fair ... an end of violence as well as the presence of international observers is of crucial importance," said a statement by current European Union president Slovenia.

Chief Elections Officer Lovemore Sekeramayi said Tsvangirai won 47.9 percent with Mugabe, who has ruled since independence from Britain, on 43.2 percent. Independent Simba Makoni, a ruling party defector, took 8.3 percent.

"Since no candidate has received the majority of the total votes cast ... a second election shall be held on a date to be announced by the commission," Sekeramayi said.

ECONOMIC MELTDOWN

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) will set the date of the run-off which should by law be held within 21 days of the result. But the ZEC has the power to extend this and political observers say a 40-day period is likely.

The opposition, critics and human rights groups have accused Mugabe of unleashing militias to scare Zimbabweans into backing him in the run-off. The government denies the allegation and says MDC members have carried out political violence.

Zimbabweans had hoped the election would herald the end of an economic meltdown that has brought food and fuel shortages and the world's highest inflation rate of over 165,000 percent.

Instead, they are victims of a political struggle between a president critics call ruthless and Tsvangirai, who has spent his time outside the country, not among supporters at home risking crackdowns.

"I don't think it's in anyone's interest not to have a peaceful resolution. Investors hope they are seeing the beginning of the end but they know that might take weeks or months," said Richard Segal, Africa strategist at Renaissance Capital.

MDC Secretary General Tendai Biti told a news conference in neighboring South Africa the results showed Tsvangirai should be declared president.

"According to the law, the person receiving the highest number of votes is the president of the republic of Zimbabwe with effect from the day of such declaration," he said.

CREDIBILITY PROBLEMS

The United States and former colonial power Britain questioned the credibility of the official results.

U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey said: "That final tally, I think, has rather serious credibility problems given the inexplicably long delays and some of the post-election irregularities."

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said: "While the process lacks transparency, it is clear that President Mugabe lost the presidential election. His campaign of violence and intimidation over the last month must stop immediately."

Mugabe accuses Britain of plotting with the opposition to oust him.

Opposition spokesman Nelson Chamisa told Reuters: "This whole thing is a scandal, scandalous daylight robbery and everyone knows that. We won this election outright."


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Reuters.com - Zimbabwe run-off announced

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An article from www.mcclatchydc.com

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McClatchy Washington Bureau
Posted on Friday, May. 02, 2008

Brazil can't find world market for its ethanol
By Jack Chang

ORINDIUVA, Brazil — The ethanol giants of southeastern Brazil have transformed how 185 million residents of this South American nation power their cars and trucks. Now, they say they're ready to start the same ethanol revolution in the rest of the world, if only the world will let them.

That, however, is where Brazil's ethanol leaders are hitting problems. They already churn out what many consider to be the world's cheapest and most efficient mass-produced biofuel and say they can export billions of gallons more.

Yet the rest of the world doesn't seem to want what the Brazilians have. In the United States, a 54 cent-per-gallon tax blocks most Brazilian ethanol from reaching U.S. consumers. Similar tariffs also block access to Europe, China and other major energy markets.



Why white Zimbabwean farmers plan to stay in Nigeria | csmonitor.com

 
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BBC E-mail: Mugabe rivals reject poll result

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** Mugabe rivals reject poll result **
Zimbabwe's opposition rejects presidential poll results that put it in the lead, but not by enough to avoid a run-off.
< http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/africa/7381590.stm >


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