Former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo arrived in the Zimbabwean
capital late Saturday to head African Union observers to upcoming
general elections in the southern African country.
"We are here not to conduct an election, we are here to observe the
conduct of an election," Obasanjo told reporters at Harare international
airport.
He will head a team of 60 observers from the continental body who are monitoring the July 31 election.
Speaking to Al Jazeera today, Obasanjo made it clear it is close to
impossible to have a perfect result or situation when it comes to
election but he said Zimbabwe did the best they could and he is proud of
the way things are going. The voting is still on
The vote is to end a troubled power-sharing government formed four years
ago by veteran President Robert and long-time rival Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai.
Brokered by South Africa, the government helped prevent the country from
tipping into full-scale conflict after a bloody presidential run-off
election which Tsvangirai boycotted, citing the killing of around 200 of
his supporters.
Both Mugabe and Tsvangirai are eyeing the presidency amid fears of
another disputed poll after chaotic preparations. Tsvangirai has already
alleged the vote will likely be rigged.
The lead-up to the July 31 election has been marred by flawed voter
registration, chaotic early polling for security forces, and lopsided
campaign coverage in the state media.
The vote was organised following the adoption of a new constitution in a referendum last March.
Obasanjo arrived days after the AU Commission chief Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma, who met the presidential candidates and poll organisers.
Members of the AU observers team have been deploying in batches. The first group arrived six weeks ago.
About 600 foreign election observers, mainly from African bodies, have
been accredited to watch the polls in addition to 6,000 local observers.
Zimbabwe has not invited Western observer missions because of sanctions
imposed on Mugabe and his top officials for rights abuses.
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