U.N. council agrees fair Zimbabwe poll impossible
By Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council will declare on Monday that a free and fair run-off presidential election in Zimbabwe would be impossible due to violence and restrictions on the opposition, diplomats said.
They said the statement, which will be the council's first formal action on Zimbabwe if it is adopted, had the backing of South Africa, China and Russia, which had long opposed any council discussion of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
"The Security Council considers that the campaign of violence and the restrictions on the political opposition have made it impossible for a free and fair election to take place on June 27," the text, obtained by Reuters, said.
Diplomats said the text had been agreed by envoys from the council's 15 member states, though Russia and one other country were still awaiting final approval from their capitals. The council was expected to formally approve the declaration later on Monday.
The non-binding text was watered down from an earlier version, which had the council explicitly blaming President Robert Mugabe's government for the crisis and saying opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai would be the legitimate leader if a credible run-off election cannot be held.
However, the agreed version says the council "notes that the results of the 29 March 2008 elections must be respected." Tsvangirai won that first-round election, though the government said his narrow victory meant a run-off poll was necessary.
The council discussed the Zimbabwe crisis on several occasions but had taken no formal action since violence broke out after Mugabe lost on March 29.
This has been due to objections from South Africa, a council member, which has insisted on "quiet diplomacy" with Mugabe's government, with the support of Russia and China. Continued...









