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Tuesday, 12 March, 2002 Voting Ends in Zimbabwe's Controversial Election Challis McDonough Harare 11 Mar 2002 23:23 UTC Voting has ended in Zimbabwe's controversial presidential election, a day later than scheduled. The Harare High Court has refused to issue another order extending the voting, as requested by the main opposition party. Police shut down polling stations and dispersed hundreds of would-be voters who never got the chance to cast their ballots. Heavily armed police officers chased voters away from polling stations in neighborhoods all around Harare. They fired tear gas and warning shots in several areas where the crowds were unwilling to leave without voting. Most polling
centers were closed at 7 p.m. local time on the dot, despite the fact that they
opened four to five hours late, on the unscheduled third day of voting in
Zimbabwe's presidential election.
One man told VOA he had waited in line for three days but still was not able to cast his ballot. He said the crowd became agitated and started shouting at the police when they tried to close the gates of the polling station. He said, "they wanted to vote." At one polling station, several international election observers said they had prevented election officials from shutting down 45 minutes early, despite the hundreds of voters waiting outside. Police eventually dispersed the crowd, and no further voting took place. Zimbabwean Information Minister Jonathan Moyo insists there were not many voters at the polls on Monday. He told reporters many election agents spent the day "twiddling their fingers." And he denied that the difficulty people had voting in Harare should lead to any real questions about the fairness of the poll. "We do not believe that just because there is a long queue, then there is a problem," he said. But the main
opposition presidential candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, says he believes the
government intentionally tried to keep his supporters in the cities from
voting. "It is unimaginable to see people determined to exercise that
democratic right and their government determined to deny them," he
said.
Mr. Tsvangirai poses a stiff challenge to incumbent President Robert Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980. It is the first time Mr. Mugabe has faced a serious threat to his hold on the presidency. The opposition leader spoke after the arrests of several high-ranking members of his party, including MDC Secretary-General Welshman Ncube. It is not clear what they were arrested for, but Mr. Tsvangirai said his party will not succumb to what he called intimidation or threats. Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy says police detained four U.S. diplomats in the town of Chinhoyi, about 100 kilometers southwest of Harare. A U.S. spokesman says they were stopped at a roadblock and detained at a nearby police station for about five hours before being released. Two of the diplomats are accredited as election observers. The spokesman says he has received no satisfactory reason for the detention, which he calls a "clear violation of diplomatic norms."
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