'Go hang', Zimbabwe's Mugabe tells rivals

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has told his defeated foes, including Morgan Tsvangirai, that they can "go hang", vowing to stay in power.

Mugabe faces fallout after disputed win

The international community has cast doubt on Zimbabwe's future after Robert Mugabe's re-election.

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe says those upset by his disputed landslide election victory could "go hang".

The 89-year-old vowed never to let go of his victory as his opponent Morgan Tsvangirai lodged a petition in court challenging the election outcome.

"Those who were hurt by defeat can go hang if they so wish," Mugabe told thousands at a rally to honour heroes of the country's liberation wars on Monday.

"Never will we go back on our victory," he said in his first public address since the July 31-vote.

Mugabe was declared the winner with 61 per cent of the ballots, against Tsvangirai's 34 per cent.

He insisted that the Zimbabwean people's choice in government was clear.

"We are delivering democracy on a platter. We say take it or leave it, but the people have delivered democracy," he said.

Tsvangirai meanwhile vowed to expose "glaring evidence of the stolen vote" through a court bid.

His lawyers on Friday filed a petition at the Constitutional Court challenging the poll, which extended Mugabe's 33-year rule by another five years.

"All I can see is a nation in mourning over the audacity of so few to steal from so many," he said in a statement.

But "the thief left so much evidence at the scene of crime as we shall expose in the people's petition that we filed last week".

The elections were to end a shaky power-sharing government formed by Mugabe and Tsvangirai to avoid a tip into conflict in the aftermath of a bloody run-off election in 2008.

Tsvangirai's defeat has relegated his Movement for Democratic Change back to the opposition benches.

Local observers have called the polls flawed and Western powers have raised serious doubts over the vote.

However, regional organisations the African Union and Southern African Development Community (SADC) were less critical.


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Source: AAP

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