|
Back to Index
Independent
observers claim massive vote fraud
Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Zimbabwe
Elections, No. 26 Part 2, April 06, 2005
By *Dzikamayi Chidyausiku
April 06,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_026_1_eng.txt
Domestic monitoring
group allege major abuses ranging from intimidation to widespread ballot-stuffing.
Zimbabwe's leading
domestic election monitoring organisation has condemned the conduct of
the 2005 parliamentary poll, saying it was conducted in an atmosphere
of fear and in defiance of regional guidelines for a free and fair ballot.
The Zimbabwe Election
Support Network, ZESN, a grouping of 35 human rights organisations, said
that in many constituencies, there were huge discrepancies between the
number of votes recorded as cast and those finally published, suggesting
ballot-stuffing or a simple manipulation of the data.
In the Manyame constituency,
for example, said ZESN chairman Dr Richard Matchaba-Hove, an extra 10,000
votes appeared between the closing of the polls, when the number of votes
cast was declared, and the announcement of the result.
The opposition MDC
was expected to win the seat, southwest of Harare, but it unexpectedly
went to the ruling ZANU PF party candidate, Patrick Zhuwawo, who is President
Robert Mugabe's nephew.
Some 23,760 votes
were finally declared as having been cast at Manyame.
But when the polls
closed a few hours earlier, election officers said 14,812 people had voted.
At this point, MDC candidate Hilda Mafuze had won 8,312 or 56
per cent of the votes cast, giving her an unassailable lead.
However, when the
final verdict was announced centrally, the ZANU PF candidate got 15,448
votes or 65 per cent of the new total.
"I won, I was leading,"
said Mafudze. "Suddenly I hear about 24,000 votes being cast and I don't
know where the extra 10,000 came from."
Human rights organisations
and opposition parties have claimed that some one to two million dead
people, so-called "zombie voters", were on electoral lists that were compiled
by ZANU PF and that were not open to inspection by opposition candidates.
Zhuwawo is the son
of Sabina Mugabe, the president's sister, who was herself elected in the
nearby constituency of Norton, where she has taken over three farms confiscated
from their white owners. They include Gowrie Farm where the farmer, Terry
Ford, was bludgeoned and shot to death three years ago.
Similar discrepancies
were noted in other constituencies. At Goromonzi, 48 kilometres east of
Harare, the 15,611 votes recorded at close of polling on March 31 had
shot up by 62 per cent to 25,360 when the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
came out with its final tally the following day. Here, too, the seat was
taken by ZANU PF.
Matchaba-Hove said
ZESN was still preparing its final comprehensive report, but results from
Manyame, Goromonzi and many other constituencies had "serious implications
on the credibility of the electoral process".
He said it was already
clear that the election did not comply with the guidelines set out last
August by the 14 heads of state of the Southern African Development Community,
SADC, the most powerful regional grouping, for a free and fair election
in Zimbabwe. President Mugabe was one of the 14 signatories.
ZESN believes that
tens of thousands of people, perhaps as much as ten per cent of the electorate,
were turned away from the polling booths. They were either told they had
the wrong documentation or were in the wrong constituency.
"Official figures
provided by the electoral commission indicate that the number of votes
cast and those turned away by close of polling in six provinces totalled
130,000 or ten per cent of the voters [in those provinces]," said ZESN's
interim report.
"For instance, in
Makoni East, where ZANU PF won by 9,201 votes compared to the MDC's 7,708,
a total of 2,223 voters were turned away. In addition, in Mutasa South
ZANU PF got 9,715 and MDC got 9,380 votes, while 1,460 voters were turned
away. In both cases, the number of voters turned away was higher than
the margin of victory."
Another concern raised
by Matchaba-Hove was that opposition parties were not free to campaign
"in certain parts of the country, as some of these were no-go areas for
the opposition".
ZESN's interim report
said, "Traditional leaders [chiefs and village headmen] threatened their
subjects with eviction and sometimes unspecified action should they fail
to vote for the ruling party."
This claim was in
accordance with evidence gathered by IWPR that the principal mechanism
used to rig the ballot was the influence ZANU PF exerted over rural areas
in Mashonaland, where the majority of the country's population lives.
In these ethnically
Shona areas, ZANU PF party officials had a longstanding practice of dividing
the population into cells of 500 people, and for the election there was
one polling station sited in each of these localities.
This structure allowed
ZANU PF activists and the Green Bombers, members of Mugabe's National
Youth Militia, to get residents to vote in their ward. Many in this rural
population are illiterate and will follow instructions delivered by their
local chief. Communal chiefs receive their salaries from the ZANU PF government.
In these areas, out
of sight and earshot of election observers and the foreign press, the
message conveyed was that the community as a whole would be held to account
if MDC votes were found in the ballot box. One warning was that farmers
would have their agricultural plots repossessed if members of their community
voted the wrong way.
It is unclear how
such communities would have voted had such pressure not been brought to
bear on them. Rural groups have suffered more than their urban counterparts
as the economy declines. In these areas, staples such as bread, sugar
and maize are in short supply.
Part of ZANU PF's
power in the countryside comes from the fact that its officials are the
conduit for food distribution.
Until last year, international
non-government organisations such as Oxfam, Care International and World
Vision donated basic food for survival, but they were expelled by Mugabe,
who said they were supporting the MDC. That left the government as sole
guardian and distributor of food supplies.
Another problematic
area in this election was the constraints placed on media. ZESN noted
that in direct contravention of a key SADC guideline, "there was no equal
access to the media by political parties".
ZANU PF monopolised
the print and electronic media. The MDC was given access to radio and
TV, both entirely controlled by the state, on a limited basis and only
for a few days close to polling day.
The MDC is claiming
it would have won 94 of the 120 elected parliamentary seats if the election
had been free and fair. Instead, it won 41 against ZANU PF's 78. One independent
won a seat.
David Coltart, the
party's legal affairs spokesman and a member of parliament, estimates
that a quarter of million ZANU PF votes may have been stuffed into strategic
ballot boxes after polls closed.
He said the MDC is
preparing a report on widespread election fraud, including the "major
disparities" between the voting numbers reported at close of polling and
those announced later by the national electoral commission. The MDC has
produced an initial list of 30 constituencies where it believes there
was ballot stuffing.
"This analysis does
not even take into account the uneven electoral playing field, the inflated
voters' roll, the coercion of the rural electorate, nor the high number
of people who were turned away on polling day," said an MDC spokesman.
All of the foreign
observer teams, cherry-picked by President Mugabe because they were unlikely
to raise concerns, have returned favourable reports on the conduct of
the election. Observer teams from countries which were critical of the
last election, such as those from the European Union, United States, Britain,
Japan, Australia and the Commonwealth, were banned from entering the country.
The observer mission
from SADC, which had laid down the guidelines for the election, said Mugabe
had met these standards. "It is SADC's overall view that the elections
were conducted in an open, transparent and professional manner," said
a SADC spokesman.
Meanwhile, a row has
broken out in the South African multi-party government delegation. This
observer team was sent to Zimbabwe after South African president Thabo
Mbeki had declared the election "free and fair" even before Zimbabweans
had gone to the polls.
The delegation head,
African National Congress, ANC, chief parliamentary whip Mbulelo Goniwe,
declared the election "credible, legitimate, free and fair" within a few
hours of the polls closing.
But three opposition
members of parliament from the official South African opposition, the
Democratic Alliance, and from the small Independent Democratic Party,
broke ranks and accused Goniwe of a "blatant attempt to stifle debate
and dissenting views on the crisis within Zimbabwe".
Noting that Goniwe
had said he would not allow team members to issue a minority report, Independent
Democrat Vincent Gore said, "Evidently the chief whip has little regard
for values such as freedom of expression as enshrined in our constitution."
Democratic Alliance
parliamentarian Dianne Kohler-Barnard said most of the observers picked
by Mugabe had not actually left "their air-conditioned comfort zones to
ask the tough questions at the grassroots level, and therefore could not
declare these elections to have been free and fair."
Kohler-Barnard said
she had broken away from the official group, and had travelled to most
parts of the country. "I have satisfied myself that this sham of an election
has been one of the most cynical frauds perpetrated on the international
community in electoral history," she said.
Goniwe said he would
introduce a motion in the South African parliament when it reconvenes
to discipline the opposition members who left the official delegation,
and who went against his instructions by not signing up to his consensus
report affirming the fairness of the election.
In Cape Town, the
official leader of the opposition, Tony Leon of the Democratic Alliance,
said it was clear that "the South African government and the ANC went
to Zimbabwe with the aim of declaring the election as 'free and fair',
come what may, and with their report already pre-certified by President
Thabo Mbeki".
*Dzikamayi Chidyausiku
is a pseudonym for an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|