Zimbabwe: Court delays election ruling
August 22, 2018Zimbabwe's Constitutional Court on Wednesday decided to delay a ruling until Friday on a petition filed by opposition candidate Nelson Chamisa that July's presidential election was rigged.
After 10 hours of arguments on Wednesday from lawyers representing Chamisa, incumbent President Emmerson Mnangagwa and the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), Chief Justice Luke Malaba said the decision would be delayed.
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Police had closed down key roads in the city center in expectation of
In the July 30 election Chamisa lost the election against Mnangagwa, who won with 50.8 percent of the vote, while Chamisa got 44.3 percent.
Opposition claims
The opposition has said the ZEC is guilty of "gross mathematical errors" and wants a fresh election.
It claims the commission increased Mnangagwa's figures via double counts and "ghost" polling stations. "It's like a kid was playing with the figures," a lawyer for the opposition, Thabani Mpofu, told the court, adding that 16 polling stations had identical results.
Malaba asked the opposition to provide the original election result forms to back up their allegations. "We cannot act on generalities," he said.
Most Western election observers and diplomats condemned the "excessive" use of force after opposition-led demonstrations in the aftermath of the election. EU election observers were in court on Wednesday.
Mnangagwa's inauguration, originally scheduled for early August, was delayed as a result of the case.
jbh/rc (dpa, AP)