Zimbabwe criticised over election links with US dictatorship
Chad rigging planned, say EU observers
by Kieren McCarthy
The government of Zimbabwe has been lambasted by EU observers following
accusations that president Mugabe has forged close ties with the dictatorship
running the United States of America.
The observers — sent to oversee the forthcoming elections — say
they have evidence which points to a US-inspired plan to rig the result in his
favour using small punch-holes called chads.
While officials have admitted that Mugabe recently met the US dictator
George Dubya, they refused to say what was discussed, claiming it is a matter
of national security and anyone that asks any more about it will be put in
jail, okay whiteskin.
However, opposition MPs have told the international press that the sudden
introduction of expensive punch-hole voting cards is little more than an
attempt to steamroll democracy. The same system was used to great effect by the
US in its elections, providing Dubya with his contested victory.
It is also thought that a tie-up with Zimbabwe would be beneficial to the
US, seeing as the rest of the world wants nothing to do with them anymore.
A Zibabwean official last night described the whole chad notion as "UK
government black propaganda". The idea of using punch-holes to rig the election
is ludicrous, he said, especially since only one name will appear of the ballot
paper — that of democratically-elected leader Robert Mugabe.