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Registrar
General's offices derailing registration of potential new
voters
Youth Forum
June 27, 2011
A Glen View
woman and her friend where last week turned away from the Registrar
General's offices after they tried to register as voters.
Netsai Manyara and her unidentified friend went to the Registrar
General's offices in Harare at Market Square with their national
IDs and valid proof of residence as is required by the law but were
surprised after they were asked to provide further proof of residence
by a woman who works in Room 20 at the offices.
"After
receiving several messages from the Youth Forum encouraging me to
register as a voter, I took my national ID and proof of residence
in the form of a water bill and a written statement from my father
that I was a resident at the house. I live at my father's
house and the bill reflects my father's surname which is also
my surname" said Manyara. "After producing the bill,
we were shocked when the lady attending to us said it was not enough
and they wanted us to produce some other proof in the form of either
a hospital bill or an account statement from one of the large stores
like Edgars, Topics or Pelhams."
Such demands
from the Registrar are not fair especially with regards to youths
as most of them cannot afford to open the accounts with the shops.
It is also a public secret that most youths cannot afford to pay
for the health services which have spiraled beyond the reach of
many through the government's anti-people policies. Having
celebrated the Day of the African Child a week ago whose theme looked
at the plight of street children, it is difficult how such demands
will allow them to vote when they are of no fixed aboard.
Such demands
are also illegal as the Electoral
Act defines "proof of residence" in section 4 (1)
(e) as "a sworn written statement by a property owner on whose
property the voter or claimant resides" while section 4 (1)
(d) allows "any other satisfactory documentary evidence reasonably
establishing the place of residence of the voter or claimant".
From the definitions, the bills and letters that Manyara and her
friend produced are more than relevant for the purposes. It is clear
that the Registrar General's office is trying to derail the
registration of new and young voters for reasons that are clear
only to themselves.
The Youth Forum
is currently looking into the matter in a bid to help the youths
and the Registrar General's offices to come to an understanding
that will see more youths registering without much hindrance. Netsai
Manyara and her friend are amongst some of the beneficiaries of
the Youth Forum's "Youth Go Register and Vote"
campaign that seeks to add 1,000,000 (1 Million) new young voters
to the voter's roll before the next election. This is part
of the organizations broad vision and mission of seeing young people
empowered through participation in all processes of relevance and
decision-making.
Visit the Youth
Forum fact
sheet
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