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Morgan
Tsvangirai's court challenge on the 2002 Zimbabwean Presidential
Election
Summary of latest developments and legal arguments
Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC)
October 14, 2003
Read
MDC Sec-General's open letter
NOTE:
This
document provides background to the petition and includes a summary
of the Heads of Argument filed in the High Court, Harare, on the
13th October 2003. It is not exhaustive and is designed as an aid
for diplomats and journalists. If any clarification is sought the
same can be obtained by contacting the MDC Legal Secretary, David
Coltart MP, on 263-91-232397 or at coltart@mweb.co.zw.
In his absence clarification regarding legal issues can be obtained
from belliot@ggg.co.zw.
INTRODUCTION AND UPDATE ON COURT CHALLENGE
What is the
court challenge about?
Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), is asking the High Court to set aside the result of the Zimbabwean
presidential election of 9 to 11 March 2002.
When is the
date for the presentation of legal argument?
From
3 to 7 November 2003 in the Harare High Court, Morgan Tsvangirai's
legal team will present legal arguments motivating for the setting
aside of the March 2002 presidential election.
What led
to the court challenge?
Robert
Mugabe was declared the winner of the March 2002 presidential election
and remains in office as president of Zimbabwe. The Electoral Act
of Zimbabwe allows Morgan Tsvangirai, as an unsuccessful candidate,
to challenge the election results by bringing an election petition
in the Zimbabwean High Court.
How and when
was the court challenge started?
On
12 April 2002, Morgan Tsvangirai launched an election petition in
the Harare High Court to set aside the result of the March 2002
presidential elections. If successful, this would lead to a new
presidential election.
Who is opposing
the election petition?
Four
Respondents are opposing Morgan Tsvangirai's election petition.
These are Robert Mugabe, the Registrar-General of Elections, the
Minister of Justice and the Electoral Supervisory Commission.
What has
been the response to the election petition so far?
There
was a delay of 2 months before the Respondents filed opposing papers
in the High Court. The Respondents, in particular the Registrar-General,
have prevented Morgan Tsvangirai's lawyers from having access to
important documents such as the original voters' rolls and other
voting materials. The Registrar-General has failed to move all the
voting materials into Harare as he is required to do in terms of
the Electoral Act. Numerous separate legal applications have been
brought by Morgan Tsvangirai's lawyers during the last 18 months
to ensure compliance with the Electoral Act. However as of the 14th
October 2003 the Registrar-General was still in breach of the Act.
Furthermore
the Registrar of the High Court has been dilatory in setting down
the election petition for hearing before the High Court, despite
the fact that the Electoral Act states that electoral petitions
should be dealt with urgently.
As a result,
Morgan Tsvangirai's lawyers brought a High Court application for
an order forcing the Registrar to set the election petition down
for hearing. This application was granted on 4 July 2003.
The Registrar
then set 3 to 7 November 2003 as the initial 5 days of the election
petition hearing. Earlier Judge President Garwe directed that, on
these days:
What will
happen after the hearing of 3 to 7 November 2003?
- Once the
legal arguments are presented, the High Court will rule on them.
- If the High
Court rules in Morgan Tsvangirai's favour on the legal arguments,
the presidential election of 2002 will be set aside. The election
petition will then be over and a fresh election will have to be
held within three months of the ruling.
- If the High
Court does not rule in Morgan Tsvangirai's favour on the legal
arguments, then later court dates will be set to hear the evidence
of abuses. If the High Court accepts Morgan Tsvangirai's evidence
of abuses, the court may declare that the election was not free
and fair, and that a new election must be held.
BACKGROUND TO LEGAL ARGUMENTS IN COURT CHALLENGE
What are the main
reasons for the court challenge? In support of his election petition,
Morgan Tsvangirai puts forward 2 main categories of objections to
the March 2002 presidential election:
- Legal arguments
- Evidence
of abuses
1st category
of objections: legal arguments
The
election should be set aside because it was not conducted in full
compliance with Zimbabwean law. There are 2 reasons for this:
- Some of the
laws and regulations used to conduct the election were not in
line with the Zimbabwe constitution, and were therefore invalid.
- The officials
and institutions conducting the election did not comply with some
important parts of the Zimbabwe constitution and other relevant
laws.
2nd category
of objections: evidence of abuses
The
election should be set aside because it was not free and fair as
a result of serious and sustained abuses by the Zimbabwean authorities
and the ruling ZANU-PF party.
Morgan Tsvangirai
presented evidence of these abuses that he claims demonstrate that
the presidential election was rigged and stolen. These abuses include:
- A campaign
of violence and intimidation against the MDC and its supporters,
leading to the death of over 100 MDC officials and supporters.
- The bribery
of voters.
- The misuse
of state-controlled media.
- The stuffing
of ballot boxes.
SUMMARY OF 3 MAIN LEGAL ARGUMENTS
There are 8 clusters
of legal arguments that will be argued by Morgan Tsvangirai's legal
team. From these 8 clusters 3 main legal arguments will be put forward
from 3 to 7 November 2003. These arguments deal with the legal validity
of:
- The Electoral
Supervisory Commission
- Section 158
of the Electoral Act
- Section 149
of the Electoral Act.
1st
legal argument: the Electoral Supervisory Commission
Morgan Tsvangirai
will argue that the Electoral Supervisory Commission was not validly
and independently able to carry out its functions during the March
2002 presidential elections.
What is the
role of the Electoral Supervisory Commission?
Section
61 of the Zimbabwe constitution says that:
- The Electoral
Supervisory Commission (ESC) must have 5 members.
- The ESC's
main functions are to supervise the registration of voters and
the conduct of elections, including presidential elections.
- In carrying
out its functions, the ESC must be independent of the direction
or control of any outside person or authority.
Why could
the ESC not validly carry out its functions?
At
the time of the March 2002 presidential election, the ESC had only
4 members - not the 5 members it needed under the Constitution.
The ESC was thus by law not validly constituted.
- Because the
ESC was not validly constituted, it could not validly carry out
its functions of supervising the registration of voters and the
conduct of the presidential election.
- As it did
not validly carry out its functions, the election was fatally
flawed and should be declared invalid.
Why could
the ESC not carry out its functions independently?
Section
11 of the Electoral Act says that, if the ESC requests, a minister
may appoint members of the Zimbabwean public service as staff for
the ESC.
Four days before
voting began in the presidential election, Robert Mugabe issued
a regulation stating that a minister of his government would appoint
the staff of the ESC. As a result of this regulation:
- Government
ministers could appoint staff to the ESC, even if the ESC had
not requested this.
- Government
ministers could appoint staff to the ESC, even if those staff
members were not members of the public service.
Robert Mugabe's
regulation violated Section 11 of the Electoral Act and undermined
the independence of the ESC by forcing it to take on staff, including
members of the military, selected by the executive arm of government.
For this reason, the ESC could not carry out its independent supervisory
functions under the Constitution and Electoral Act. This fatally
compromised the elections and they should thus be declared invalid.
2nd
legal argument: section 158 of the Electoral Act
Morgan Tsvangirai
will argue that section 158 of the Electoral Act is unconstitutional,
and that this invalidates the 2002 presidential elections because
the conduct and outcome of the elections was strongly influenced by
regulations made under section 158.
Who decides
on election laws?
Sections
28, 58 and 113 of the Zimbabwe constitution make it clear that the
"electoral law" governing the conduct of presidential and parliamentary
elections must be a law passed by parliament. In other words, parliament
must decide on the content of electoral laws.
What does
section 158 of the Electoral Act say?
Section
158 of the Electoral Act delegates to the president of Zimbabwe
the power to amend the electoral law mentioned in the constitution.
This may include the power to make deletions from or additions to
election laws.
Why is section
158 of the Electoral Act unconstitutional?
- By giving
the president, a member of the executive branch, the power to
amend the Electoral Act, section 158 goes against the Zimbabwe
constitution that says only parliament can make electoral laws.
Section 158 thus violates the principle of the separation of legislative,
executive and judicial powers.
- By unconstitutionally
delegating parliament's legislative power to the president, section
158 is invalid, and any regulations made by the president under
section 158 are also invalid.
- By effectively
granting the president unlimited powers, section 158 is clearly
unconstitutional. For example, the president is able to exercise
these delegated powers "as he considers necessary or desirable"
without any limitations and without getting any parliamentary
approval.
- By allowing
Robert Mugabe the power to make electoral laws unilaterally, section
158 removes the possibility of public and parliamentary debate
on these laws, in accordance with the principle of the separation
of powers.
How did Robert
Mugabe use section 158 of the Electoral Act?
Robert
Mugabe used section 158 to introduce a number of regulations and
orders that:
- Fundamentally
affected the way the presidential election was run.
- Fundamentally
changed important parts of the Electoral Act.
For example,
Robert Mugabe used section 158 to pass regulations that had the
effect of:
- Disenfranchising
large numbers of Zimbabwean citizens who were declared to be "foreign"
citizens.
- Disenfranchising
some categories of postal voters.
- Limiting
the number of voting stations set up in urban areas, where the
MDC was strongest.
- Repeatedly
and secretly extending the cut-off date for voter registration,
thus allowing late registration of voters in areas sympathetic
to Robert Mugabe and ZANU-PF.
- Overturning
court rulings that had declared invalid some of the regulations
passed by Robert Mugabe under section 158.
3rd legal
argument: section 149 of the Electoral Act
Morgan Tsvangirai
will argue that section 149 of the Electoral Act was incorrectly published.
Who is responsible
for publishing laws?
The Law Reviser
is the official with the responsibility for publishing legislation
passed by the Zimbabwe parliament.
What does
section 149 say?
Section 149
of the Electoral Act, as published by the Law Reviser, states that
an election may be declared invalid by a court if:
- "There
was a demonstrable failure to conduct the election in accordance
with the principles for a free and fair election laid down in
the Electoral Act, and
- There
occurred a mistake or failure which demonstrably affected the
result of the election."
In other words,
Morgan Tsvangirai must not only show that there were serious irregularities
in the conduct of the election, but he must also show that, if those
irregularities had not occurred, he would have won the election.
Why is the
wording of section 149 important?
The
word "and" between the 2 paragraphs of section 149 is vitally
important. If that word was "or" instead of "and",
it would be much easier for Morgan Tsvangirai to win his election
petition. If the word was "or":
- Morgan Tsvangirai
would have to show only that the election was not conducted
according to the rules for free and fair elections.
- He would
not have to show that, without those irregularities, he would
or would probably, have won the election.
Was the correct
version of section 149 published?
In
fact, the version of section 149 published by the Law Reviser is
wrong. Morgan Tsvangirai will demonstrate that:
- When the
Zimbabwe parliament voted for and approved section 149 of the
Electoral Act, the word they approved was indeed "or",
not "and".
- It was the
Law Reviser who - whether by error or otherwise - changed the
text actually approved by parliament, by substituting "and"
for "or".
Other legal
arguments
Other legal arguments
include failures related to the extension of the election for a third
day (on the 11th March 2002), the unlawfulness of holding local council
elections in the key urban constituencies of the capital Harare and
Chitungwiza during the same period as the Presidential election and
discriminatory practices which prejudiced urban voters
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