Zimbabweans voted on Monday in the country's first election
since ageing autocrat Robert Mugabe was ousted last year, with the
opposition vowing to overcome alleged ballot fraud and defeat the ruling
Zanu-PF.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mugabe's former
ally in the Zanu-PF party, faces opposition leader Nelson Chamisa of
the MDC (Movement for Democratic Change) in a historic vote for the
southern African nation.
Long lines of voters waited
outside polling stations from morning, with election authorities saying
early signs suggested a high turnout nationwide.
"I
just have to do this. I have to see a better Zimbabwe for my kids.
Things have been tough," Tawanda Petru, 28, an unemployed man voting in
Mbare, a low-income district of the capital Harare, told AFP.
"I'm going to vote for Chamisa, for change. I am not afraid, I can tell you."
Mugabe,
94, who was ousted by the military in November, voted at his regular
polling station in Harare alongside his wife Grace after making a
surprise intervention on the eve of the election to call for voters to
reject Zanu-PF.
During a two-hour press conference at his sprawling mansion in
Harare, Mugabe had said he might vote for the opposition MDC —
underlining Zimbabwe's haywire political scene since his fall.
Mnangagwa,
voting in his Kwekwe constituency in central Zimbabwe, said Mugabe had
the right to express his mind under the country's new "democratic
space".
"I am very happy that the process for campaign was peaceful (and) voting today is peaceful," the current president added.
"I am very happy that the process for campaign was peaceful (and) voting today is peaceful," the current president added.
A clean vote?
Mnangagwa,
75, who has promised a fresh start despite being from the Zanu-PF
elite, is the election front-runner with the advantage of covert
military support, a loyal state media and a ruling party that controls
government resources.
The party also holds the majority in the lower house of parliament, which is also up for election.
But
Chamisa, a 40-year-old lawyer and pastor, who has performed strongly on
the campaign trail, hopes to tap into a young population that could
vote for change.
"I have no doubt that by the end of
the day today we should be very clear as to an emphatic voice for
change, the new, and the young — I represent that," Chamisa said as he
voted in Harare, supported by chanting supporters.
He
again raised fraud allegations, saying "in the rural areas... if the
ballot is a genuine one, not a fake one, victory is certain."
On Twitter, he alleged there was a "deliberate attempt to suppress" voting in urban areas — MDC strongholds.
Zimbabwe's
generals shocked the world last year when they briefly seized control
and ushered Mnangagwa to power after Mugabe allegedly tried to position
Grace to be his successor.
The election is Zimbabwe's
first without Mugabe, who led ZANU-PF to power when the country became
independent from Britain in 1980 and held office for 37 years.
Elections
under Mugabe were marred by fraud and often deadly violence, and this
year's campaign has been dogged by accusations the result will be
rigged.
The MDC has raised repeated allegations of a
flawed electoral roll, ballot paper malpractice, voter intimidation and
bias in the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC).
But campaigning has been relatively unrestricted and peaceful.
But campaigning has been relatively unrestricted and peaceful.
A recent Afrobarometer survey of 2,400 people put Mnangagwa on 40 percent and Chamisa on 37 percent, with 20 percent undecided.
Mnangagwa,
who is accused of involvement in election violence and fraud under
Mugabe, invited international observers — including the
previously-banned European Union team — to the poll.
The EU team will deliver a preliminary report later in the week.
Desperate for investment
The
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights warned of alleged intimidation
and threats of violence in the run-up to polling day, but said it was
encouraged to see open rallies and peaceful demonstrations.
The
next government must tackle mass unemployment and an economy shattered
by the Mugabe-backed seizure of white-owned farms, the collapse of
agriculture, hyperinflation and an investment exodus.
Previously solid health and education services are in ruins and millions have fled abroad to seek work.
Life expectancy has only just recovered to its 1985 level of 61 years.
"The
governing ZANU-PF party needs to maintain a semblance of free and fair
elections in order to attract fresh foreign investment," said the
London-based EXX Africa business risk consultancy.
"However, there remain serious concerns over vote credibility."
With 5.6 million registered voters, the results of the presidential, parliamentary and local elections are due by August 4.
"I
voted for Mnangagwa. We cannot trust the inexperienced. They will take
the country back to ours colonisers," said Robina Mayobiongwe, 80,
voting in Lupane in rural west Zimbabwe.
A run-off vote is scheduled for September 8 if no presidential candidate wins at least 50 percent in the first round.
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