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Electoral
Reforms 2: Towards greater transparency
Youth Forum
November 21, 2012
With Zimbabwe's
previous elections all marred with controversy, the electoral reforms
that have been instituted have clauses that aim at achieving greater
transparency in all forthcoming elections. The youths of Zimbabwe,
speaking at a gathering organised by the Youth Empowerment and Transformation
Trust (YETT), said they believed that these reforms, if fully implemented,
can lead to a more transparent manner in conducting elections.
Disclosure
of Ballot Paper Details
Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) is now required publicly to disclose and provide
political parties and candidates with information about the total
number of ballot papers printed for each election, where the ballot
papers have been printed as well as how the ballot papers have been
distributed to the different polling stations. This should make
it easy for all actors to tally the numbers that will be officially
released by ZEC with the figures they have.
Access
to the Voters' Roll
The Voters'
Roll is a public document - the public, including you can
inspect the voters roll free of charge at ZEC or Constituency Registrar
during normal working hours. This has always been the case before
the reforms, and the Youth Forum would like to encourage the youths
of Zimbabwe to utilize this opportunity to inspect if their names
still appear on the roll, and if the captured details are correct.
From the current
reforms, persons and organizations will be able obtain electronic
or printed copies of the roll for a reasonable fee. We hope the
Registrar General's offices will improve from their version
of 'electronic' copies, where they previously provided
the electronic copy in the form of an image, which would require
specialized character recognition software to bring it into a format
that is easy to analyze.
Whilst we understand
the need to provide the roll in a form that is not easy to alter
for security reasons, it is important for to look at other formats
like Portable Document Format (PDF) that will make it easier for
the document to be analyzed using various software.
After an election
is called, political parties contesting the election and accredited
observers will be entitled to a copy of the electronic roll or printed
roll for a reasonable fee. The Youth Forum encourages the responsible
authorities to have the 'reasonable fee' as only enough
for the production costs of the roll and not be prohibitive for
those who want a copy of the roll.
Also, each nominated
candidate will be entitled to obtain an electronic copy of the constituency
roll free of charge.
Presidential
Election and Run-off
In a bid to
avoid the embarrassment of the 2008 March Presidential
election where the results were announced after more than 30
days of the election, ZEC is now mandated to announce Presidential
election results within 5 days of final day of polling. However,
the Electoral Court can, for good cause, extend that period on application
from ZEC.
Proclamation
specifying election date must now also specify the date for possible
run-off poll. But a drafting error resulted in inconsistency, with
one section saying the runoff should be held within 21-63 days of
the initial election while another gives the period as 28-42. ZEC
has since noted this, and we hope they will rectify this in time
for the next election.
Polling
Station Results to be Made Public
To foster transparency
in terms of results, the new regulations now state that at each
polling station the presiding officer must:
- post certified
returns outside the station;
- provide each
candidate or polling agent with copy of return; and
- forthwith
provide every political party and candidate that contested an
election with polling station return sent to the constituency
center.
At the Constituency
Centers, the constituency elections officer must:
- Post certified
return of the collated results outside constituency center;
- Provide
each candidate or polling agent with copy of that return; and
- Forthwith
provide every political party and candidate that contested the
election with a copy of every polling station return sent to the
constituency center and the constituency return sent to the National
Command Centre.
Reforms
Must be Fully Implemented
These measures
thus require at every stage of the processing of results open disclosure
of the results, which makes it almost impossible for results to
be altered at a later stage because every single result is known.
The Youths that
gathered at the YET Trust offices, whilst applauding these reforms,
reminded the authority that without full adherence and respect for
these, the next elections can still be controversial, and all these
reforms will only be meaningful if they are fully implemented.
Visit the Youth
Forum fact
sheet
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