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Zimbabwe
halts preparations for census
Sebastian
Mpofu, Voice of America
August 07, 2012
http://www.voanews.com/content/zimbabwe-halts-preparations-for-census/1475141.html
Zimbabwe's national
census, due to begin next week, is up in the air after the government
stopped preparations in order to remove army officials who had bulldozed
their way into the process. Some analysts say the army wants to
get involved in order to intimidate citizens ahead of the next elections.
Preparations
for Zimbabwe's census, which is scheduled to start next week,
were thrown into disarray after the government halted the process
this week. The move came after army officials got involved in the
counting process. Traditionally the census in Zimbabwe is done by
teachers.
"We shall
not divert on that culture [of employing teachers to enumerate]
because the results [of] that count of our census has had the credibility
in the region, in the country and international results. We shall
adhere to that ritual," said Zimbabwe's acting finance
minister, Gorden Moyo, speaking to reporters in Harare. Moyo. "That
doesn't mean the army doesn't have a role to play, to
protect our enumerators. And then they [have a] limited role in
their own military cantons, in the barracks."
In Zimbabwe,
many people associate the army with intimidating civilians. In the
1980s, President Robert Mugabe's government used soldiers
to intimidate and to commit violence against perceived dissidents
in the southern part of Zimbabwe. In the disputed elections
of 2008, the army was said to be involved in violence against
supporters of the then-opposition MDC party.
Analyst Claris
Madhuku, who heads Platform
for Youth Development (PYD), said the involvement of the army
in the census might be meant to appease them as the soldiers are
poorly paid.
"Secondly,
since we are close to the forthcoming elections, soldiers would
want to interact with the community members," said Madhuku.
"As they go through the process of counting, they want to provide
some form of intimidation so that the community in the next election,
they must vote for ZANU-PF [Robert Mugabe's party] or else."
Zimbabwean army
officers have said the past they would not support anyone who is
not from ZANU-PF, which fought the country's liberation struggle
from Great Britain.
Zimbabwe's last
census was held in 2002. That census showed Zimbabwe had about 11.6
million people.
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