For 1st time in almost 40 years, a Zimbabwe election without Mugabe
HARARE, Zimbabwe -- Zimbabweans on Monday were voting peacefully in their first election without Robert Mugabe on the ballot, a contest that could bring international legitimacy and investment or signal more stagnation if the vote is seriously flawed. About 5.5 million people were registered to vote in this southern African nation anxious for change after economic and political paralysis during the nearly four-decade rule of 94-year-old Mugabe.
Long lines formed outside many polling stations in Harare, the capital, and elsewhere.
"I want to do this and get on with my business. I am not leaving anything to chance. This is my future," said Emerina Akenda, a first-time voter.
Thousands of election monitors fanned out across the country to observe a process that the opposition says is biased against them despite electoral commission assurances that it will be credible.
The two main contenders are 75-year-old President Emmerson Mnangagwa, a former deputy president who took over after Mugabe stepped down under military pressure last year, and 40-year-old Nelson Chamisa, a lawyer and pastor who became head of the main opposition party a few months ago after the death of its leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Mugabe on Sunday called Chamisa the only viable candidate and rejected Mnangagwa and the ruling party, saying that "I cannot vote for those who have tormented me."
Piercing whistles and cheers greeted Chamisa as he voted outside Harare, who declared on Twitter that "minus the ballot mischief ... Victory is certainly certain!"
He said he hoped voting in rural areas, where most of Zimbabwe's voters are and where the ruling party usually holds sway, will be fair.
Mnangagwa urged Zimbabweans to be peaceful, tweeting: "We are one people, with one dream and one destiny. We will sink or swim together." He voted and called the election peaceful, and he took Mugabe's criticism in stride, saying: "He is a citizen ... He can engage me anytime."
A record of more than 20 presidential candidates and nearly 130 political parties were participating. If no presidential candidate wins 50 percent of the vote, a runoff will be held Sept. 8.
"This is a critical moment in Zimbabwe's democratic journey," said Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, former Liberian president and a leader of one of the international observer missions.
"The elections today provide an opportunity to break with the past," Sirleaf said at a polling station in a school in Harare. "The lines and voter enthusiasm we are seeing this morning must be matched by an accurate count and their choice must be honored."
Past elections were marred by violence, intimidation and irregularities, but Mnangagwa, a former enforcer for Mugabe who says he now represents change, has promised that this election will be free and fair.
The presence of Western election monitors for the first time in years is an indicator of a freer political environment, though concerns have been raised about state media bias toward the ruling party as well as a lack of transparency with the printing of ballot papers.
European Union election observers were seen at one polling station in Harare, checking the voting process. African Union observers attended the opening of polling stations elsewhere.
Even though it was a public holiday, some government offices were open so that those who had lost identity cards could get replacements and then cast their ballots.
Inside polling stations, voters were given three ballot papers: one for their presidential pick, another for member of parliament and a third for local councilor. Polling officers helped voters put each ballot paper in the right box.
"We need change because we have suffered a lot here," said 65-year-old Mable Mafaro while voting in Harare. "We have suffered a lot. That's all."
CBS News' Debora Patta has covered two previous elections in Zimbabwe, under Mugabe, neither of which were deemed to be free or fair.
"We've seen hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters being banned, being arrested, being detained, violence against them, being tortured, and in some cases even murdered," Patta said.
President Mnangagwa blamed an attack last month on one of his rallies on a faction linked to Grace Mugabe, the wife of ex-president Mugabe. Dubbed "Gucci Grace" for her lavish shopping sprees, she was unpopular in the country. Mugabe wanted his wife to succeed him as president but he was forced to resign last year.
Mugabe first came to power in 1980, and Monday's ballot is the first in the country since then to not feature his name.
Patta reports that Mnangagwa is believed to have had a hand in rigging prior elections. But he has been trying to rehabilitate his image.
"He has made significant changes in that country," Patta said. "For example, elections so far have been for the most part allowed to be conducted freely. Candidates have been able to campaign without any intimidation, without violence – notwithstanding the bomb attack, that was something that was a little out of the ordinary. Freedom of speech, things have started opening up there."
Patta reports that Mnangagwa is also trying to attract international investors. That even includes legalizing medicinal marijuana farming, which has raised some eyebrows in the more conservative country.