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Election posters in support of Zimabwean president Robert Mugabe in Harare. AP Photo
Zimbabwe

'If you lose you must surrender': Mugabe vows to step down if he loses election

Polls show that Mugabe is set to lose tomorrow’s election but the opposition has produced what it says is evidence that the government plans to rig the elections.

VETERAN ZIMBABWEAN PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe has pledged to step down if he loses fiercely contested elections in the country, as his rivals claimed they had evidence of vote-rigging.

“If you lose you must surrender,” the 89-year-old firebrand said at a rare press conference in Harare on the eve of Wednesday’s presidential and parliamentary vote.

Mugabe, through a series of violent and suspect elections, has ruled Zimbabwe for 33 years without interruption since it gained independence from Britain.

But he denied any attempts to rig the vote, declaring: “We have done no cheating.”  He faces a major challenge from Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, his reluctant partner in an uneasy power-sharing government forged after the last bloody polls in 2008.

Tsvangirai, though buffeted by sex scandals and allegations of party corruption, has drawn tens of thousands of supporters to his campaign rallies.

But Mugabe’s challengers fear the wily old crocodile of Zimbabwean politics will seek to win what is likely his final election through fraud or violence, if necessary.

Few believe the military – which remains squarely behind the one-time liberation hero – would recognise a Tsvangirai victory.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change today handed over what they claimed was documentary evidence of plans to rig the election to observers from the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

‘A million dead voters’

The dossier, which was seen but could not be independently verified by AFP, listed around 125 duplicate or questionable voters gleaned from examining the electoral roll.

The MDC received a copy of the roll less than 24 hours before polling stations open, and only in printed form, rather than digital.

“It is very clear to us there are shenanigans to try and rig this election, to try and interfere with the outcome of this election and to subvert the will of the people,” junior minister Jameson Timba told AFP.

Mugabe admitted that delivery of the roll was one of the logistical “hitches” in the runup to the vote. “I only got my copy of the voters roll yesterday,” he said.

No one at the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission was available to comment. However, an SADC observer, who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the press, said the MDC dossier raised serious questions.

“It’s not normal. If the roll had been released two weeks ago, these kind of problems would have been fixed.” The dossier will only serve to fuel longstanding suspicions that the chaotic state of the voters’ roll could be used to pad Mugabe’s vote tally.

In June, the Research and Advocacy Unit, a non-government group, said after examining an incomplete roll that it included a million dead voters or emigres, as well as over 100,000 people who were more than 100 years old.

Around 6.4 million people are eligible to vote in Wednesday’s first round, and results are expected within five days.

Credible opinion polls are rare, but according to one survey by the US-based Williams firm in March-April, Mugabe could be in for a rough ride. In a survey of 800 Zimbabweans, 61 percent said they had a favourable view the MDC compared with 27 percent for Mugabe’s ZANU-PF.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: Zimbabwe’s finance minister: ‘The government has €161 in the bank’

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