Zimbabwean opposition decries post-election harassment by army

IANS  |  Harare 

The main opposition party of Zimbabwe, the (MDC), has denounced harassment and persecution by the against party members.

The MDC and local human rights groups have reported beatings, intimidation and kidnappings by military personnel in the capital and other parts of the country.

said at a press conference in that the aim of the current repression is to ensure that the results cannot be challenged.

The for the MDC, Nelson Chamisa, was officially declared to have lost the election to of the ruling Zanu-PF party, who garnered more than 2.4 million votes (50.8 per cent), thus avoiding the need to hold run-off election.

Chamisa has stressed that he won the July 30 vote, denouncing the "unverified fake results" reported by election authorities.

pointed out that Chamisa has a large legal team which plans to appeal the election results, although the team has not yet taken any firm steps three days after the announcement of the results by the Electoral Commission.

Criticism of the intensified after troops on Wednesday used live ammunition, water cannons and tear gas in the streets of Harare, killing six people in an attempt to suppress opposition protests over the delay in reporting the official election results.

A total of 27 MDC members and staff on Monday appeared in court on charges of inciting violence - charges that the accused denied.

The July 30 was Zimbabwe's first balloting in 37 years that did not feature the former leader, Robert Mugabe, who was ousted from power in November 2017.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, August 07 2018. 03:52 IST