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Zimbabwe army vows vote neutrality as opposition raises boycott prospect![]() Mozambique municipal elections in doubt Maputo (AFP) July 4, 2018 - Municipal elections in Mozambique scheduled for October 10 could be delayed, an official said Wednesday, after disagreement between the ruling Frelimo party and opposition Renamo on peace negotiations. The government and Renamo, which has an armed militant wing, have been in peace talks after unrest erupted between 2013 and 2016. The disarmament and integration of Renamo fighters into the regular army and police has been a major sticking point in talks, with the government demanding the immediate disbanding of Renamo forces. Parliament should have approved the electoral law last month to allow the election on October 10. "We have no procedural law to organise elections. Let's wait until Parliament approves the law then we will re-establish the elections," Paulo Cuinica said in press conference in the capital Maputo. Renamo accepts disarming its military wing, but says demilitarisation should take place after the elections. Renamo fought a bloody 16-year civil war against the ruling Frelimo party until 1992. Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama played a key role in advancing the peace process with President Filipe Nyusi, but his death in May from a suspected heart attack aged 65 threw the talks into doubt.
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Zimbabwe's military vowed Wednesday to stay neutral in upcoming elections and denied it would influence nationwide voting scheduled for July 30 as the opposition said it would not contest unfair polls.
The military is under close scrutiny following its brief takeover in November that led to the resignation of former president Robert Mugabe.
Previous elections under Mugabe were marred by violence, intimidation and fraud -- often alleged to involve the security forces.
"The Zimbabwe Defence Forces has no direct role in the upcoming elections," said army spokesman Overson Mugwisi at a media conference in Harare ahead of the presidential, parliamentary and local polls.
"We are disturbed by false reports alleging that the Zimbabwe Defence Forces is going to be used by (the ruling) ZANU-PF to rig the posted vote."
Following the military's statement, the leader of the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party Nelson Chamisa said it would not participate in unfair elections and raised the prospect of calling for the election to be run by an outside body.
"We will not go into an election that has its own machinations," he said, casting doubt on the work of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission but signalling his support for the military.
"We are going to be tempted to ask the South African Development Community (SADC) and African Union (AU) to take over" organising the vote, said Chamisa, referring to the regional and continental blocs.
- 'Violence-free but illegitimate election' -
He also called for the ZEC, which he has previously accused of being heavily staffed by regime supporters, to store and distribute ballot papers more transparently.
"We therefore call upon SADC, the AU and the international community to intervene and save a collapsing process and abate an imminent legitimacy crisis," he said.
The army appears to have staged its media briefing in response to a report in the Standard daily that it had deployed active service personnel to rural areas to campaign for candidates in ZANU-PF primary contests.
The Standard said it had received complaints from defeated contenders for the ZANU-PF slate.
They reported that some winning candidates who were former senior military officers had been "roping in the army to win the primary elections," it said.
"If some serving members are participating in the ongoing political campaigns, they will be doing so illegally and not as a result of an instruction from their commanders," said Mugwisi.
"The conduct of the Zimbabwe Defence forces after elections is going to be guided by the constitution."
July's polls will be the first ballot box test for Mnangagwa, and the first since Mugabe was forced to resign after 37 years in power.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa, 75, has pledged to hold free and fair elections as he seeks to mend international relations.
But the main opposition remains unconvinced by his stated commitment to democratic standards.
"What we are currently witnessing is a regime that simply talks but does not intend to hold credible elections. We are moving towards a violence-free but illegitimate election," added Chamisa.
But Chamisa signalled his faith in the military, saying he was "not worried".
"They are a patriotic army. They are a professional army, I work with the army very well. In fact, I respect them," he said.
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