Seven Zimbabwean government ministers and several allies of President Emmerson Mnangagwa were defeated in primary elections for parliament, results showed on Thursday, as disputes threaten to divide the party ahead of polls set for July.

Zimdancehall musician Kudzanai Mamhare popularly known as Enzo Ishall was humiliated by Zanu-PF supporters after receiving only seven votes out of 1,385 in Sunningdale, Harare during Zanu-PF primary elections held at the weekend.


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The official results of the primary elections are announced by the national command centre at the party headquarters. There could be other sources giving information through Twitter, but those results are not official.

Previous elections under Mugabe were marred by violence, intimidation and fraud -- often alleged to involve the security forces.


"The Zimbabwe Defense 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 Defense 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 signaling 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" organizing 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 Defense 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 signaled 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.

The announced results of course were not very different to what everyone expected, including many of those in the opposition, and were certainly broadly in line with earlier polling. ZANU-PF won in the rural areas outside Matabeleland North and parts of Manicaland, while the CCC won in the urban centres, including claiming all the 12 Bulawayo seats, as their candidates there had been reinstated following a court dispute over registration. ZANU-PF remains a rural (mostly Mashonaland) party and people will continue to vote for it, partly because amongst the councillors and MPs there are some very committed candidates chosen through effective primary elections.

ZANU PF on Monday announced the preliminary results of primary elections reruns held on Saturday in Churu, Mbare, Zvimba West, and Gokwe Nembudziya.Party national political commissar Mike Bimha said the results are subject to confirmation by the Politburo.The winners are as follows: Fundukwa Ephraim (Churu), Matinyanya Martin (Mbare), Mercy Dinha (Zvimba West), and Flora Buka (Gokwe Nembudziya). The losing candidates are Charles Matsika (Churu), Emmanuel Mahachi (Mbare), Ziyambi Ziyambi (Zvimba West), and Justice Mayor Wadyajena (Gokwe Nembudziya).In an interview with NewZimbabwe.com last Wednesday, Maruva-Dinha, who wife to former long-serving Mashonaland Central Governor, Martin Dinha, said:Get Pindula News on our WhatsApp Channel

Robin Muchetu, Senior Reporter

ZANU-PF is still verifying and assessing primary election results in all provinces and will give a detailed report once the process has been completed.

Last week Zanu-PF announced that it was looking into the concerns raised by some candidates in various constituencies who took part in the recent primary elections. Cde Bimha said they had set up a special ad-hoc tribunal which met to discuss the complaints raised by some disgruntled candidates which he said were likely to affect the results of the elections. He also reiterated that preliminary results that were announced were not final as they were yet to be confirmed by the Politburo.

The primary election results came in with several surprises as some veteran parliamentarians fell by the wayside ushering in a new and youthful leadership, a move that is set to change the face of politics in Zimbabwe.

It was a hullabaloo at Rutenga Primary School as Primary election results were unannounced by close of day 27 March for elections that were conducted on Sunday 26 March in a tightly contested election that pitted heavy horses Yunis Omar ,Tavengana Mezenda,Jabulani Mberesu and Shiellah Chikomo.

Participation of Women and Members of Minority Groups: No laws limit participation of women or members of minority groups in the political process, and they did fully participate as voters and candidates. Women remained largely underrepresented in local and national political offices, and men overwhelmingly held most senior positions in the public sector. Female candidates faced particularly vitriolic gender-based insults regarding appearance, sexual proclivity, and other gender-based stereotypes and faced challenges within their party if running against a male candidate in a primary. During the 2018 elections, several female MDC-A candidates reported some party leaders demanded women to have sex with them for their names to appear on the party candidate list. Those who refused found their names left off the list. e24fc04721

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