Tendai Biti convicted for falsely claiming MDC won Zimbabwean elections

A Zimbabwean court has convicted the prominent opposition politician for announcing that his party's leader won disputed elections held in July.


Former finance minister Biti was on trial for “unofficial and false declaration of results.” Magistrate Gloria Takundwa fined him $200 for the offence.

Biti, also a leading human rights lawyer, fled the country to neighbouring Zambia in August citing threats to his life. He was deported back to Zimbabwe days later and arrested for allegedly violating the electoral law.

Main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa and his party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), have rejected the election results, claiming the electoral agency rigged the vote to ensure a win for President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Zimbabwe has sunk deeper into political turmoil and economic decline since the elections, the first to be held without former longtime ruler Robert Mugabe. At one time the elections were viewed by both local and the international community as key to turning the country around after decades of repression.

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