World | Morgan Tsvangirai Tsvangirai: Why I Dropped Out MDC leader explains refusal to contest Zimbabwe election By Jason Farago Posted Jun 25, 2008 5:58 AM CDT Copied Police lead detained Movement for Democratic Change supporters onto a bus after a raid on the opposition party headquarters in Harare, Monday June 23, 2008. (AP Photo) ZImbabwe's opposition leader tells the Guardian that he dropped out of Friday's run-off election because he "can no longer allow Zimbabwe's people to suffer this torture." Morgan Tsvangirai explains that ending his campaign was "not a political decision" but an attempt to stop the violence inflicted by Robert Mugabe's thugs. Tsvangirai predicts Mugabe will proclaim himself the duly re-elected leader of Zimbabwe this weekend and "further deny its people a space to breathe." But he warns that Mugabe's regime can only be changed from the outside, with international peacekeepers and a real election: "Intervention is a loaded concept in today's world," he admits, but the international community has no choice but to "become more than a moral participant." Read These Next The suspect in the Charlie Kirk shooting is a 22-year-old from Utah. Utah's governor asks a tough question after Kirk shooting. ICE stop ends with driver dead, agent hurt. Trump says the Charlie Kirk suspect has likely been caught. Report an error