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Vision - Seeing double and the dead: A preliminary audit on
Zimbabwe's voters' roll
Derek
Matyszak, Research and Advocacy Unit Zimbabwe
October
12, 2009
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Introduction
The registration
of voters and the compilation and maintenance of an accurate national
voters' roll has been recognized as an essential and key part of
the electoral cycle. Since the voters' rolls record who may or may
not vote, they may ultimately have a determining effect on who wins
the poll. Equally importantly, it is imperative that the voters'
rolls, being the cornerstone of the administration of a democratic
election, be accurate and up to date. While an incomplete voters'
roll may disenfranchise those who might otherwise be entitled to
vote, an inflated roll containing duplicate entries, names of persons
who have emigrated or of dead voters, lends itself to electoral
fraud. For if the roll is inflated a false and increased ballot
count can be effected (through ballot box stuffing, multiple voting
or manipulation of the figures on returns) without appearing blatantly
implausible against the number of registered voters. Inaccurate
voters' rolls have a knock-on effect on the delimitation of constituencies,
portraying an inaccurate number of voters for each area. In a first-past-the-post
system, such as that adopted by Zimbabwe for all elections other
than the presidential, this assumes increased importance as the
number of "wasted votes" may be increased due to wrongfully
delimited areas based on a false presentation of the number of voters
in a particular area. In the same way, an inflated roll acts as
the justification for printing an excessive number of ballot papers,
further opening possibilities for electoral fraud.
Background
The question
of the (in)accuracy of the voters' rolls is a contentious issue
and has been raised as a basis for the allegation that successive
elections in Zimbabwe do not meet the requirement of being "fair"
in accordance with internationally accepted democratic standards.
All elections from 1985 onwards have been conducted under the auspices
of successive electoral supervisory bodies and the same Registrar-General
perceived by some observers and opposition candidates to be extremely
partisan. As a result the voters' rolls, under the control of these
bodies, have also been perceived as being deliberately inaccurate
and inflated to facilitate manipulation of the vote count. Such
criticism has appeared in reports on elections published by NGOs
and independent observer groups. This suspicion and taint to the
claim of a democratic mandate by the winners of the elections could
have been, and can be, easily dispelled by an independent audit
of the criticized voters' rolls and their subsequent rectification
- an exercise made that much easier with the advent of powerful
and easily accessible computer technology. It is one which should
be welcomed by electoral management bodies and the Registrar-General
in the interests of transparency and to support any claim of a fair
election.
In fact, the
contrary has been the case. The Registrar-General has repeatedly
hindered people trying to inspect the voters' rolls. This obstructionist
attitude has been abetted by supine Electoral Commissions which
have done nothing to curb the Registrar-General's behaviour and
by successive changes to the Electoral
Act designed to reverse the small victories in the courts which
facilitated access. It is instructive to track these changes to
the legislation as they form a record of deliberately opaque governance
and a persistent governmental stance that the voters' rolls should
not be subjected to scrutiny by the public.
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