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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Kenyans
call for solidarity with Zimbabwe
Kenyans For Peace With Truth and Justice (KPTJ) and
the National Civil Society Congress (NCSC)
April 03, 2008
http://www.propertykenya.com/news/528675-kenyans-call-for-solidarity
The People of
Kenya, individually and through various civil society organizations
grouped under the National Civil society Congress and Kenyans for
Peace with Truth and Justice (KPTJ), are deeply concerned by the
pace at which the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has been announcing
results from the elections.
We applaud the
people of Zimbabwe for being patient, yet very alert and vigilant
to avoid the manipulation of results. We call on them to remain
united, engage the state in a constructive manner, and avoid acts
that violate the rights of any fellow citizen.
Civil society
leaders in Kenya, having learnt our lessons during our last election,
last week delivered a message to the parties and the civil society
formations in Zimbabwe, to totally seal loopholes at the command
center in Harare to ensure that the vote of every Zimbabwean counts
equally.
Over the past
year, Kenyan civil society organizations and political parties (through
the Center for Multi Party Democracy (CMD) have worked closely with
the people of Zimbabwe in their tortuous search for a new, democratic,
prosperous Zimbabwe - the Zimbabwe they want. Representatives of
Kenyan civil society organizations have been involved in constructive
discussions and advocacy aimed at guaranteeing a framework for a
free, fair and credible election that was finally carried out on
Saturday, March 29, 2008.
This election
was expected to be epic. Not only because it is historic and supremely
positioned to demarcate Zimbabwe's future from her past, but also
because it was a complex and momentous exercise that had to deliver
civic councillors, Members of Parliament, Senators, and a President
for Zimbabwe, all through the markings of a single pen at a polling
centre.
We identify
with the positions and calls made yesterday April 2, 2008 by the
civil society groups in Zimbabwe organized for this election under
the Umbrella of the Zimbabwe
Elections Support Network (ZESN) . We now send out the following
unequivocal messages:
We regret that
the SADC
mediation process for Zimbabwe was so poorly handled; it did
not deliver a new democratic constitutional order and establish
a credible electoral process.
We regret that
the people of Zimbabwe had to conduct these elections amidst an
inflation rate of over 100,000%, with the rate of unemployment standing
at over 80% and with nearly 5,000,000 of their nationals residing
outside their country. They deserve a better country and we pledge
to support them while, alongside us in Kenya, they struggle to reconstruct,
reform and reconcile Zimbabwe Kenyans demand that ZEC announces
the results of the Presidential vote immediately without further
delay, to avoid a situation where the country may degenerate into
chaos, triggered by the fear that ZEC is manipulating or tampering
with the Presidential elections results.
That the international
community offers the people of Zimbabwe solidarity at this moment
of great need.
That SADC and
the African Union take the lead in facilitating a smooth and peaceful
transition in Zimbabwe They must urge Mugabe NOT to tamper with
the election results.
That SADC should
review their statement that concluded that elections were free and
fair while closing their ears to the significance of the undemocratic
practices of the ZANU-PF regime. These include the stranglehold
monopoly of the media by ZANU, the criminal intimidation of the
masses by the security forces, and the declaration by Robert Mugabe
that votes that were to be cast for the opposition were wasted votes
as he planned to retain power.
We in Kenya
know too well, and indeed witnessed while on the ground in Zimbabwe,
that both the political environment and the administration of the
elections did not facilitate free and fair elections. The media
was monopolized by ZANU-PF. Restrictive laws such as Public
Order and Security Act (POSA), Access
to Information and Protection to Privacy Act were applied severelly.
Administratively,
the voters roll was not in order. There were high counts of ghost
voters on electoral rolls. Distribution of polling stations and
involvement of the police officers in the polling stations contravened
terms agreed at the SADC Mediation process, chaired by President
Thabo Mbeki.
We demand that
the security forces not interfere with the sovereign will of the
people, and that African Union and SADC standards on democratic
governance be applied fully. We wish to inform the security forces
that as Africans, Kenyans are of the view that Zimbabwe is too important
to be left to Zimbabweans alone. Our position is that "an injury
to one of us is an injury to all of us"!
As we issue
this statement, there is a heavy presence of (anti) riot police
and army troops in the streets of Harare and Bulawayo. Combined
with the delay in announcing votes, this could provoke serious civil
unrest and even anarchy. We call upon Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangrai
to submit to sovereign will of the people when a credible result
is finally delivered by the ZEC.
We propose that
the people of Zimbabwe, immediately after this nervous transition
convene an African Conference on Zimbabwe. As Kenyans, we shall
engage upon their invitation and urge our government to fully support
the democratic re-emergence of Zimbabwe from the brink of collapse
and destruction. We look forward to addressing jointly our shared
agenda of reconstruction, reform and reconstruction. Kenya and Zimbabwe
must regain their rightful places of leaders of the continent's
struggles for democratic development and Human development.
Signed:
- The National
Civil Society Congress
- Africa Centre
for Open Governance (AfriCOG)
- Awaaz
- Bunge la
Mwananchi
- Centre for
Law and Research International (CLARION)
- Centre for
Multiparty Democracy (CMD)
- Centre for
Rights, Education and Awareness for Women (CREAW)
- The Cradle-the
Childrens Foundation
- Constitution
and Reform Education Consortium (CRECO)
- East African
Law Society (EALS)
- Fahamu
- Haki Focus
- Hema la Katiba
- Independent
Medico-Legal Unit (IMLU)
- Innovative
Lawyering
- Institute
for Education in Democracy (IED)
- International
Commission of Jurists (ICJ-Kenya)
- International
Centre for Policy and Conflict
- Kenya Human
Rights Commission (KHRC)
- Kenya Leadership
Institute (KLI)
- Kenya National
Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR)
- Kituo cha
Sheria
- RECESSPA
- Law Society
of Kenya (LSK)
- MARS Group
Kenya
- Muslim Human
Rights Forum
- National
Convention Executive Council (NCEC)
- Society for
International Development (SID)
- The 4 Cs
- Urgent Action
Fund (UAF)-Africa
- Youth Agenda
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