TIMELINE: Aftermath of Zimbabwe's crucial elections
(Reuters) - Below is a chronology of some of the key developments since Zimbabwe's elections on Saturday.
March 29, 2008 - Voting ends around 7 p.m. (1 p.m. EDT) in presidential, parliamentary and local elections.
March 30 - Opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) claims victory over President Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party based on early results pinned up outside polling stations.
-- Harare residents told to stay indoors and riot police patrol the streets.
March 31 - Electoral commission starts announcing results of parliamentary election. Seats are split evenly between the opposition and ruling party. No presidential results emerge.
-- Observer mission from regional group SADC says elections were free and fair but expresses concerns over delay to results. Monitors from South African opposition refuse to sign report.
-- United States, European Union and former colonial power Britain voice concern over delay to vote counting and urge publication of results as quickly as possible.
April 1 - Ruling ZANU-PF party projections obtained by Reuters show opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai would beat Mugabe but not with enough votes to avoid a runoff.
-- MDC says it is on the verge of power after dismissing speculation it is negotiating a managed exit for Mugabe. The government also dismisses reports of talks.
April 2 - MDC says it won presidential and parliamentary elections and calls on Mugabe to concede. ZANU-PF says MDC claims are "wishful" and Mugabe is going nowhere.
-- State-owned newspaper, The Herald, says Tsvangirai and Mugabe will face a run-off as neither will achieve the 51 percent required for an outright win.
-- Latest parliamentary election results show ZANU-PF with 93 seats and the MDC, 91 with five seats going to a breakaway opposition faction. A total of 206 seats were contested.
(Writing by David Cutler, London Editorial Reference Unit; Editing by Matthew Tostevin)
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