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Mugabe sworn in after denounced vote

Main rival says ruling party ready for talks

President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe was hastily sworn in for a sixth term yesterday in Harare. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe was hastily sworn in for a sixth term yesterday in Harare. (ALEXANDER JOE/AFP/Getty Images)
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Angus Shaw
Associated Press / June 30, 2008

HARARE, Zimbabwe - Zimbabwe's longtime ruler Robert Mugabe was sworn in as president for a sixth term yesterday after a widely discredited runoff in which he was the only candidate. His main rival dismissed the inauguration as "an exercise in self-delusion."

Just hours after electoral officials said Mugabe won Friday's presidential runoff, which observers said was marred by violence and intimidation, the 84-year-old leader sounded a conciliatory note.

"Sooner or later, as diverse political parties, we shall start serious talks," he said in a speech after his swearing-in. He also had promised talks on the eve of the vote.

Mugabe, Zimbabwe's leader since independence from Britain in 1980, was expected at an African Union summit that opens Monday in Egypt, where he was to face fellow African leaders who want him to share power with his main rival, Morgan Tsvangirai.

Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, told Associated Press Television News that yesterday's inauguration was "meaningless."

"The world has said so, Zimbabwe has said so. So it's an exercise in self-delusion," he said.

Tsvangirai said he believed members of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party were ready for talks.

"I think that the reality has dawned on all the elites in ZANU-PF," Tsvangirai said. "Without negotiating with the MDC this is a dead end."

African and other world leaders have condemned Friday's vote. Human rights groups said opposition supporters were the targets of brutal state-sponsored violence during the campaign, leaving more than 80 dead.

Residents said they were forced to vote by threats of violence or arson from Mugabe supporters who searched for anyone without an ink-stained finger - the telltale sign that they had cast a ballot.

Human Rights Watch said in a statement that Mugabe supporters beat people who could not prove they voted.

Tsvangirai withdrew from the race because of the violence, though his name remained on the ballot.

The electoral commission said results showed more than 2 million votes for Mugabe, and 233,000 for opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai. Turnout was put at about 42 percent, and 131,000 ballots had been defaced or otherwise spoiled, apparently as an act of protest.

A high number of spoiled ballots had been noted by Marwick Khumalo, a member of parliament from Swaziland who led a team of election observers from across the continent under the auspices of the AU-sponsored Pan-African Parliament.

Khumalo said some ballots were defaced with "unpalatable messages."

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