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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Referendum
observations
Habakkuk
Trust
March 18, 2013
Quite a number
of people failed to exercise their right to vote in the just ended
Zimbabwe
referendum after failing to produce the relevant identifications.
Only people with National Identity cards and current passports were
eligible to vote, however because of lack of voter education, most
people were ignorant of the correct documentation needed. This trend
was noted both in urban and rural as people carried from birth certificate,
to photocopied national identity cards, expired passports as well
as driver’s licences to try and vote. At Mthombowesizwe Primary
school in Entumbane (Bulawayo) one eager person was turned away
after producing a birth certificate. Some youths below 18 years
but were of the idea that possessing an I.D was eligibility to vote
were turned away.
Only those who
turned 18 years on or before 15 March 2013 were eligible to vote.
At Lukhanyiso Primary in Mpopoma (Bulawayo) one was turned away
because the I.D was too old while at Amhlophe in Pumula there was
also a similar case. ‘Aliens’ were also not spared as
they were turned away in most polling stations in Bulawayo and outlying
stations. At Cameroon Primary School in UMguza at a community that
is largely Xhosa speaking, the Habakkuk Trust Observer Mission noted
at midday about four people were turned away for having brought
a letter from the church as they did not have national identity
documents.
At Esikhoveni
and Mbalabala in UMzingwane a significant number of voters who were
turned away had brought birth certificates.
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