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  • Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30


  • US observer mission condemns Zim Poll
    The Daily News Online
    April 06, 2005

    http://www.daily-news.co.za

    HARARE - THE United States Observer mission to Zimbabwe"s recent elections has denounced the manner in which the parliamentary poll was conducted saying it was fraught with irregularities irrespective of the peace that prevailed throughout the country.

    In a press statement, the US Embassy in Harare said its observers had noted "several patterns of irregularities that raised concerns about the freeness and fairness of the process".

    "Of particular concern was a lack of transparency in the tabulation of vote counts," the embassy said. "The US observers were excluded from observing counts in four polling stations. Where they were admitted, observers and officials, including party representatives and neutral domestic observers were locked in the polling station and not permitted to communicate with anyone outside."

    However the US embassy said uniformed policemen were observed communicating the vote tallies via radio and telephone.

    The embassy said in several observed instances, the presiding officer confiscated the notes compiled by party polling agents and independent observers before letting them depart the polling station.

    The concerns of the Zimbabwe embassy of the US government follows widespread condemnation of the election result by several western governments and the opposition.

    Their statement comes hardly a week after US secretary of State Condoleeza Rice denounced the conduct of the March 31 poll as lacking credibility.

    She said although the campaign and election day itself were peaceful, the election process was neither free nor fair.

    The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), the only opposition party to contest in all of the 120 contested constituencies yesterday reported that it had established irregularities in 76 constituencies.

    The US embassy said it sent out 25 teams of diplomats accredited as election observers by the Electoral Supervisory Commission (ESC). They observed more than 350 polling stations in 59 constituencies.

    They also queried the roles of Zanu PF agents and the police in the supervision and conduct of the polling stations. In the operation of Zimbabwe Election Commission (ZEC) tabulation centres, the US office said the embassy observers witnessed uniformed

    policemen participating in the vote compilation instead of the ZEC officials at the respective constituencies.

    Other irregularities the US embassy observed include the biased citing of some polling stations, the high number of voters turned away and the failure by the ZEC to release the voting results of any polling station.

    In an apparent indictment of the ZEC, the US Embassy said: "The ZEC has failed to explain why its initial release of totals of ballots cast only included six of the country’s 10 provinces, neither has it explained why it never released results for the remaining four provinces.

    "Moreover it has failed to explain why discrepancies its announced figure for ballots cast in constituencies for those six provinces differed so rastically from the subsequently released official combined vote totals for candidates in the constituencies."

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