外国黄片网站黄色片一级视屏|国产视频-日美不卡在线视频|看欧美1级1级1级生活片儿|青青草人人插青青操干日AV|青青操在线免费观看av|一级成年国产中文字幕av一|美女黄黄视频骚货网站在线观看|欧美一级做一级a做片|少妇高潮一区二区三区99|丁香五月蜜桃久久久亚洲精品成人

Zimbabwe to hold general election on July 30: President Mnangagwa

Source: Xinhua| 2018-05-30 19:23:57|Editor: Liangyu
Video PlayerClose

ZIMBABWE-HARARE-MNANGAGWA-ELECTION

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa addresses a meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe, May 30, 2018. President Emmerson Mnangagwa announced Wednesday that Zimbabwe will hold general elections on July 30. (Xinhua/Shaun Jusa)

HARARE, May 30 (Xinhua) -- President Emmerson Mnangagwa announced Wednesday that Zimbabwe will hold general elections on July 30.

He made the announcement in a government gazette where he also set June 14 as the date for the sitting of the nomination court for prospective candidates to register.

He set Sept. 8, 2018 as the date for the election runoff in the event that no presidential candidate gets an outright win of 50 percent plus one vote.

In the notice, Mnangagwa said he had fixed "Monday, the 30th day of July, 2018, as the day of the election to the office of President, the election of members of the National Assembly and election of councilors."

The elections will be the first without former President Robert Mugabe and his fierce opponent for 20 years, Morgan Tsvangirai who died in February this year from cancer.

Mugabe resigned in November last year after a military intervention, ending his 37-year stay in power.

The proclamation of the election date comes a day after Mnangagwa signed the Electoral Amendment Bill into law.

The enactment was published in an extraordinary government gazette on Monday night.

The election date also follows the closure of the 11-day provisional voter's roll inspection on Tuesday.

The new Electoral Act gives effect to the Statutory Instrument on the Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) that was undertaken by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) through the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act, which had a lifespan of six months.

The law amends some sections of the Electoral Act of 2004 to complete the alignment of certain provisions of that Act with the new Constitution and enhance ZEC's independence.

It also gives ZEC more control over the accreditation of election observers, authority to allow accredited observers to monitor all electoral processes, and to provide more clearly for polling station voters rolls.

The new Act also makes voters' rolls more accessible, removes ZEC's monopoly on the provision of voter education, and obliges ZEC to enact codes of conduct to be observed by traditional leaders, members of the security services and civil servants, among other things.

Mnangagwa has promised to deliver free, fair and credible elections and his government has since invited 46 countries from across the world to observe the general elections.

The observer countries include some from the West that had not observed Zimbabwe's elections since 2002 when relations with Harare soured.

Since the beginning of the year, several regional groupings in Africa and the European Union, among others, have sent pre-election observer missions to Zimbabwe.

Mnangagwa, 75, will face the 40-year-old leader of the opposition MDC-Alliance Nelson Chamisa in the presidential poll.

   1 2 Next  

KEY WORDS: Zimbabwe
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001372179531