Zimbabwe election: Opposition rejects 'fake' poll results
text_fieldsHarare: Zimbabwe's opposition leader has dismissed "unverified fake results" after President Emmerson Mnangagwa was declared winner of the first election since the ousting of Robert Mugabe, reported BBC
Nelson Chamisa's MDC Alliance vowed to launch a legal challenge, saying the vote was rigged.
Mnangagwa has called on Zimbabweans to unite behind his presidency.
Protests erupted in capital, Harare on Wednesday which left six people dead,and police are patrolling the streets A police vehicle with a loudspeaker was reported by the BBC correspondent as broadcasting the message: "Zimbabwe is open for business. We are here to protect you. Feel free to walk and open your business. All is well, fear not."
Mnangagwa, of the governing Zanu-PF party, took office after President Mugabe, 94, was forced to resign in November. The vote was intended to set Zimbabwe on a new path following years of repressive rule, but tensions are now rising.
Mnangagwa narrowly avoided a run-off by taking 50.8% of the vote, official results show. Mr Chamisa took 44.3%.
The electoral commission announced the presidential election results from the 10th and final province, Mashonaland West, late on Thursday after days of waiting.
The results of the parliamentary election were announced earlier in the week. They gave Zanu-PF 144 seats; the MDC Alliance, which is made up of seven parties, 64 seats, and one seat to the National Patriotic Front, formed by Mugabe loyalists.
Although Zanu-PF won by a landslide, its majority has shrunk since the 2013 election when it obtained 160 seats and the MDC, then led by the late Morgan Tsvangirai, 49.

















