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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Fear Looms As Zimbabwe Election Gets Underway

    Fears loom as Zimbabwe election gets underway

    Fearful voters gathered at Zimbabwe's heavily guarded polling stations Friday for a controversial run-off election that world leaders and human rights advocates have condemned as unfair.

    Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai said he fears voters will be threatened and forced to cast a ballot, even though he dropped out of the race Sunday and many of his supporters say they want to boycott it.

    Rumours were flying that militants in President Robert Mugabe's ruling party would use violence and intimidation to get a massive turnout at the polls, one that would make the election seem valid and his expected victory credible. Voters talked about reports that militants would be checking people's fingers for ink stains, the tell-tale sign that they had cast their ballot, which requires being fingerprinted.

    Tsvangirai, in an e-mail to supporters on Friday, told them if they felt forced to vote, they could always spoil their ballots.

    "God knows what is in your heart. Don't risk your lives," the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change urged them.

    Tsvangirai has been holed up in the Dutch Embassy out of fears for his safety since Sunday, when he withdrew from the election because of concerns about violence and intimidation. Mugabe is now the only candidate in the race, although Tsvangirai's name is still on the ballot because officials said they didn't have enough time to remove it.

    Opposition supporters targeted

    Dozens of opposition supporters have been killed and thousands injured in the weeks leading to the election, the opposition claims.

    Others have been arrested, including Tendai Biti, the second in command of Tsvangirai's party. He is charged with treason and could be sentenced to death if convicted but was granted bail Thursday.

    Overnight Thursday, the opposition distributed flyers across the southern African country, urging voters to boycott if possible.

    "Is it necessary to vote?" said Harare resident Cephas Sango asked after reading the flyer.

    He said he didn't know what he would do, since he had heard the rumours about militants checking fingertips for ink.

    Marshals collect names at polls

    In Harare's high-density Mbare suburb, lines formed at polling stations as voters arrived in groups, led by apparent ruling-party marshals carrying books filled with names. In one side street, names were being called and ticked off as about 25 people gathered before heading to a tented polling station.

    Meanwhile, some 20 paramilitary police in riot gear were stationed in a central Harare park, while riot police and regular uniformed officers manned roadblocks in front of the South African Embassy, where at least 200 fugitives of violence in the countryside were camped with blankets and bundles of belongings in the parking lot.

    On Thursday, Mugabe said he was "open to discussion" with the MDC, but only after the vote. Mugabe had shown little interest in talks and his government had scoffed at Tsvangirai's call Wednesday to work together to form a transitional authority.

    Tsvangirai was first in a field of four in the first round of voting held March 29, but the official tally said he did not gain the votes necessary to avoid a run-off against second-place Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe for nearly three decades.

    Tsvangirai's party and its allies won control of parliament in the March elections, dislodging Mugabe's party for the first time since it took power when Zimbabwe gained independence from Britain in 1980.

    Mugabe, once hailed as a leader committed to development and reconciliation, has been criticized in recent years as a dictator who has allowed Zimbabwe to spin into economic turmoil. Efforts to dislodge him at the ballot box have repeatedly been stymied by fraud and intimidation.

    -With files from the Associated Press


    So what does everyone think about this?
    It's examples such as these that make me wish the UN wasn't so completely useless.
    It's sad they haven't done anything yet, but even more sad that they probably won't do anything at all, and Mugabe will continue his regime.
    I think something should be done immediately, like sending troops to help make it more secure through the election.
    FreshNugz Reviewed by FreshNugz on . Fear Looms As Zimbabwe Election Gets Underway Fears loom as Zimbabwe election gets underway Fearful voters gathered at Zimbabwe's heavily guarded polling stations Friday for a controversial run-off election that world leaders and human rights advocates have condemned as unfair. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai said he fears voters will be threatened and forced to cast a ballot, even though he dropped out of the race Sunday and many of his supporters say they want to boycott it. Rumours were flying that militants in President Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Fear Looms As Zimbabwe Election Gets Underway

    Quote Originally Posted by FreshNugz
    So what does everyone think about this?
    It's examples such as these that make me wish the UN wasn't so completely useless.
    It's sad they haven't done anything yet, but even more sad that they probably won't do anything at all, and Mugabe will continue his regime.
    I think something should be done immediately, like sending troops to help make it more secure through the election.
    Isn't there an African Peacekeeping force that would be better equipped to deal with this? As for the U.N.....I think that Lebanon is a perfect example of what they can't achieve. Sending the same type of "task force" to Zimbabwe would be a waste....alot of good the French were in Rwanda.

    Have a good one!:s4:

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Fear Looms As Zimbabwe Election Gets Underway

    Yea, it is sad. And it will get worse. I was there last year when the inflation rate was only 150000% it is over a million now. there will be no animals or fertile land left by the time somebody puts a bullet in Mugabe
    \"I observed...that the more public provisions were made for the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer.\"
    Benjamin Franklin
    i\'d rather not be told by the all powerful state how far i may rise and how much i can accumulate. i\'d rather have the freedom to fail than the mediocrity of an enforced comfortable poverty. a free market allows such a life. all else is slavery.DelusionsofNormalty
    .

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