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#ZororoForever| It Doesn't Feel Like It's Been a Year
#ZororoForever| It Doesn’t Feel Like It’s Been a Year
I have this game I play with myself sometimes where I try to think of a person or a thing that I haven’t thought about in years. An annoying coworker of a woman I dated. A scene from a movie I forgot I’d seen. A shot I made in a pickup game in high school. It’s a fun – well, fun for me – way of testing my memory and my ability to recall sh*t that’s been tucked away because it’s inessential. I’ve…
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investmart007 · 6 years
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HARARE, Zimbabwe | Zimbabwe's Mnangagwa takes lead in presidential election
New Post has been published on https://is.gd/oP3NrR
HARARE, Zimbabwe | Zimbabwe's Mnangagwa takes lead in presidential election
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa took a strong lead in the presidential election late Thursday, with nine of the country’s 10 provinces declared.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission requested a break of one hour before announcing the final province, Mashonaland West, considered a stronghold of the ruling ZANU-PF party. Mnangagwa led with 2.1 million votes to 1.9 million for his main challenger Nelson Chamisa, whose strongholds in the cities of Harare and Bulawayo had already been counted.
A win for Mnangagwa is expected to leave Zimbabwe with deep political divisions, worsened by deadly rioting in the capital.
The death toll from street clashes Wednesday rose to six, with 14 injured, police said, and 18 people were arrested at the offices of the main opposition party amid tensions over a vote that was supposed to restore trust in Zimbabwe after decades of rule by Robert Mugabe.
There were conflicting accounts of who was responsible for the bloodshed in the capital of Harare, which followed opposition protests of alleged vote-rigging. Police tried to disperse angry crowds with tear gas and water cannons, and then soldiers fired live rounds.
While the military has been criticized for the crackdown, police spokeswoman Charity Charamba blamed rioters, saying some were drunk and that they destroyed eight cars and 22 shops. About 4,000 opposition supporters, some carrying iron bars and stones, were “besieging” downtown Harare, she said.
Mnangagwa and his ruling ZANU-PF party also accused the opposition of inciting the violence. The opposition, human rights activists and international election observers condemned the “excessive” force used against protesters and appealed to all sides to exercise restraint.
Meanwhile, police raided the Movement for Democratic Change party headquarters of Chamisa. A lawyers’ group said he was being investigated by police for allegedly inciting violence.
Chamisa, opposition politician Tendai Biti and several others are suspected of the crimes of “possession of dangerous weapons” and “public violence,” according to a copy of a search warrant, which was seen by The Associated Press. The warrant authorizes police to search for and confiscate any evidence as part of their investigation.
The authenticity of the warrant was confirmed by Kumbirai Mafunda, a spokesman for Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights.
Chamisa, however, said the police who raided his headquarters and seized computers were looking for what he called evidence of vote-rigging. The evidence already had been moved to a “safe house,” he said.
Opposition demonstrations had broken out after electoral officials said the ruling party had won a parliamentary majority in the elections, and Paul Mangwana, a ZANU-PF spokesman, told a news conference he anticipated similar success in the presidential race.
As the rival camps sparred over the outcome, they also appealed for calm. Mnangagwa said his government was in touch with Chamisa to try to ease tensions, although the opposition leader said he had not received any communication.
During the 37-year rule by Mugabe, who resigned in November under military pressure, elections were marked by violence against the opposition and alleged fraud, and international sanctions were imposed on Zimbabwe as a result. A credible vote is crucial to the lifting of the sanctions so that the collapsed economy can recover.
Monday’s balloting was called free and fair by the electoral commission.
The European Union observer mission expressed “serious concerns” as representatives of Western and other groups gave their first assessments of the election.
Former Liberian leader Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the lead observer of a U.S. monitoring mission, also had expressed concern about delays in announcing results, saying that the longer it went on, “the more it calls into question the population’s confidence in the election process.”
Mnangagwa, who is close to the military, called for an “independent investigation” into the riots, saying those responsible “should be identified and brought to justice.”
The military deployment was the first time that soldiers had appeared in the streets of the capital since Mugabe’s resignation. At that time, thousands of jubilant residents welcomed their presence. Some Harare residents expressed frustration and exhaustion at the violence.
“We are a peaceful nation,” said 29-year-old Sifas Gavanga. “We don’t deserve the death we saw.”
By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA and FARAI MUTSAKA ,Associated Press
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