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Clashes heighten concerns ahead of Zambia election

The two leading contenders in Zambia’s presidential election condemned Tuesday fresh outbreaks of violence between their supporters as concerns grow that the relatively stable country could face worsening unrest.

File: United Party for National Development Presidential candidate, Hakainde Hichilema (L), casting his vote at a polling station in Lusaka, Zambia, 20 January 2015 Photo :ANP/EPA/Jacoline Schoonees / Gcis. Zambian President Edgar Lungu (R) addresses supporters on May 21, 2016 at the Heroes Stadium in Lusaka as he launches his re-election campaign ahead of polling day on August 11. Photo: ANP/ AFP Salim Dawood
File: United Party for National Development Presidential candidate, Hakainde Hichilema (L), casting his vote at a polling station in Lusaka, Zambia, 20 January 2015 Photo :ANP/EPA/Jacoline Schoonees / Gcis. Zambian President Edgar Lungu (R) addresses supporters on May 21, 2016 at the Heroes Stadium in Lusaka as he launches his re-election campaign ahead of polling day on August 11. Photo: ANP/ AFP Salim Dawood

Just 18 months after President Edgar Lungu narrowly won a snap election, he and his main rival Hakainde Hichilema face off again in Thursday’s polls in a field of nine candidates.

The stakes are high, with Lungu battling to retain the office he secured only last year, and Hichilema pushing to finally secure victory after four previous attempts.

Only 27,757 votes — less than two percentage points — separated the two candidates in the 2015 ballot.

With new constitutional rules demanding that the winner needs more than 50 percent, a second round run-off could be held weeks after the election, heightening hostilities further.

On Monday, supporters of Lungu’s Patriotic Front (PF) attacked an open-top campaign bus of Hichilema’s United Party for National Development (UPND) in the Mtendere district of Lusaka.

UPND activists fled as rocks smashed into the vehicle, internet video footage showed, while several injuries were reported during other skirmishes in the district.

“Zambia is a peaceful nation,” Lungu said in a statement. “I will not tolerate any person attempting to break the peace we have.

“What happened in Mtendere yesterday is unacceptable. I have called on the police to… enforce laws on any person who will be found guilty irrespective of their political affiliation.”

Election-related clashes have erupted regularly in recent months, with Hichilema’s loyalists furious at alleged attempts by authorities to quell opposition campaigning.

– Economic growth dives –

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The UPND’s vice president has been arrested and released twice, and the main independent newspaper has been closed in an apparent dispute over taxes.

The election commission halted campaigning in the capital Lusaka for 10 days last month in an effort to reduce the violence.

“The PF shamelessly obstructs our campaigns by intimidating media outlets, leaning on the police to cancel our rallies and sponsoring attacks on our supporters,” Hichilema commented to AFP by email.

“We have seen unarmed supporters shot dead by police and our youths beaten to death for no other crime than wearing a UPND T-shirt.”

Zambia, ruled by Kenneth Kaunda from 1964 until 1991, has suffered a sharp downturn in economic growth and thousands of job losses in its crucial copper-mining sector.

GDP growth last year was 3.6 percent, the slowest since 1998, while inflation is over 20 percent.

“Both sides say that only a rigged election could stop them winning,” Neo Simutanyo, director of the Centre for Policy Research, told AFP.

“The level of tension is higher than in the past, and the environment is not conducive to peaceful and fair elections.

“We are worried our democratic record is threatened.”

The election is being held after the 2015 vote gave Lungu the right to complete the term of the late president Michael Sata, who died in office of an undisclosed illness.

Felix Mwelwa, 53, a casual labourer in Mtendere, scene of Monday’s unrest, said that unemployment must be the priority for the next government.

“We are now a country of street traders, not a country of production,” he told AFP, declining to reveal his choice of party.

“Youths have nothing else to do, so they join in with election fighting and the police don’t stop it.”

No polls have been published predicting the election winner.

Zambia also votes on Thursday to choose lawmakers and local councillors, and in a referendum on an amended bill of rights. AFP

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