Mugabe Wins Despite Biased Propaganda TEHRAN TIMES INTL. DESK TEHRAN -- President Robert Mugabe easily won Zimbabwe's election on Wednesday despite biased propaganda unleashed against him by some Western countries, accusing him of being unfair towards the opposition. Results announced by Registrar-General Tobaiwa Mudede at 0800 GMT showed Mugabe with 1,634,382 votes, well past the 50 percent of ballots cast that he needed to extend his 22-year rule for six more year. His challenger, former trade unionist Morgan Tsvangirai, trailed almost half a million votes behind. Mudede said 3.1 million people voted in the three-day election. There were fears of a violent reaction from Tsvangirai's supporters, and security forces were put on high alert and police put up road blocks on approach roads to the capital Harare. Australia said it feared violence if voters thought the election had been stolen. Canberra is a member of a Three-Nation Commonwealth task force monitoring the election. Tsvangirai, saying Mugabe has destroyed the economy of the once prosperous nation, accused the president of systematically stealing the election to hide his deep unpopularity with voters, Reuters reported. Mugabe's government has dismissed criticism of the poll, which Information Minister Jonathan Moyo called "exemplary". Western countries queued up to condemn the election in which the 78-year-old president faced his first real challenge. The United States, condemning the reduction of polling stations in opposition urban strongholds, said the election was "seriously flawed" and riddled with irregularities. Australia and Britain led an unsuccessful call for commonwealth sanctions against Mugabe before the election. New Zealand said on Wednesday it was ready to impose sanctions against Zimbabwe if the commonwealth decided not to suspend the country after the vote.