Zimbabwe’s opposition has rejected President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s historic presidential election win after a poll marred by deadly violence and allegations of vote rigging.
On Thursday night, Mnangagwa was declared winner of the election, the country’s first since the toppling of veteran leader Robert Mugabe, with a slim lead over Nelson Chamisa, head of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Mnangagwa, who took over the ruling Zanu-PF party from Mugabe last year and was appointed President, won 50.8 percent of the vote, the election commission said. Chamisa received 44%.
The president tweeted that he was “humbled” by the result. “Though we may have been divided at the polls, we are united in our dreams,” he added. “This is a new beginning. Let us join hands, in peace, unity & love, & together build a new Zimbabwe for all!”
However, shortly before the result was announced at the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, MDC chairman Morgan Komichi took to the stage to make an unexpected televised statement. He said his party rejected the defeat and alleged the vote was “fake.”
Komichi and other opposition party members who questioned the count were escorted out of the room before the final vote was announced.
On Thursday before the results were released, the MDC’s spokesman had insisted that Chamisa was set to win the presidential vote. “If the result is such that if we didn’t win, then certainly it’s not the reflection of what the people of Zimbabwe did on the 30th,” Nkululeko Sibanda told CNN.
Lure back foreign investment
The results came amid fears of further unrest and doubts about how international observers will view Mnangagwa’s narrow victory in an election tarnished by violence and allegations of poll rigging.
Zimbabwe is anxious to ensure the elections are considered free and fair in order to lure back foreign investment and resuscitate the country’s ailing economy.
Partial results of the parliamentary vote, announced Wednesday, gave Zanu-PF two-thirds of the seats in the National Assembly’s lower house, prompting opposition supporters to take the streets of the capital Harare in protest against allegedly fraudulent results.
Six people were killed in clashes between protesters and security forces, eliciting statements of concern from the United States, the United Nations and the United Kingdom. Mnangagwa called for an independent investigation into the violence.
On Thursday, police arrested 18 people during a raid at the MDC headquarters, Zimbabwe Republic Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba said. The charges were not immediately clear, but he added that 26 people suspected of inciting violence during Wednesday’s protests were taken into custody.
‘The crocodile’
Mnangagwa, 75, who replaced Mugabe after serving him for decades, took power after helping orchestrate a de facto coup against Mugabe in November.
Known as “the crocodile” for his political cunning and longevity, he has tried to rebrand Zanu-PF, pledging to heal divisions and rebuild the country.
But Mnangagwa is still widely considered to represent a continuation of Mugabe’s rule because he worked closely with the former leader for more than 40 years, first as his special assistant during the 1977 liberation war, and later as security minister and justice minister.
However Mugabe, 94, who voted in Harare on Monday with his wife Grace, called on voters to reject ZANU-PF, his former party.
“I can’t vote for the people who have brought me into this state,” said the former autocrat who ruled the country for 37 years. Chamisa, who at 40 is the country’s youngest-ever presidential candidate, has aimed to appeal to younger voters with promises of electoral reform, tax cuts and jobs.
He took over the leadership of the MDC after the death of its founder and longtime anti-Mugabe activist Morgan Tsvangirai, who died from cancer in February.
Zimbabwe, which suffered crippling hyperinflation under Mugabe, desperately needs the International Monetary Fund to start giving it loans again. It also needs the United States, European Union and others to lift sanctions.