ZIMBABWE:Zimbabwe will not invite election observers from Western countries to monitor a presidential run-off unless they remove sanctions, state media said yesterday, rejecting opposition demands.
Justice minister Patrick Chinamasa said Zimbabwe would not bow to pressure to invite election monitors from western countries and the United Nations. "We will not allow them . . . We will think favourably of them if they lift sanctions," the state-run Herald newspaper quoted him as saying.
"Until they do that, there is no basis to have any relationship with them."
After weeks of equivocation, opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai said at the weekend he would contest the run-off against Robert Mugabe even though he believes he won outright in the first round and accuses the ruling ZANU-PF of vote-rigging.
Mr Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) said he would return home to deal Mr Mugabe a "final knock-out" after almost three decades in power. But Mr Tsvangirai said he would only stand if international observers and media were given full access to ensure the vote is free and fair.
Zimbabwe's government rejected any conditions for the run-off, but has previously allowed in election monitors from regional group SADC. Only one European country - Russia - was invited to observe the March 29th poll.
Diplomats accredited in Zimbabwe were the only other western observers allowed to monitor the vote.
The standoff has dashed hopes that the election will bring relief to millions of Zimbabweans suffering severe food, fuel and foreign currency shortages and the world's highest inflation rate of 165,000 per cent.
Mr Mugabe blames Zimbabwes economic collapse on western sanctions, which have failed to weaken him. Western countries say the limited measures are designed only to target Mr Mugabe and his top officials.