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Is
Zimbabwe heading for peaceful 2013 elections
Students
Solidarity Trust
November 09, 2012
In Zimbabwe post
2008 March
election violence claimed hundreds of lives and displaced thousands.
A precedent had been set in Kenya, following the December 27, 2007
elections where post election violence had claimed about 1500 lives
and displaced more than 300 00 people. Both scenarios led to governments
of national unity. Elections are now inevitable in 2013, posing
the question on whether Zimbabwe is heading for peaceful elections.
As much as it is difficult to tell now if the impending elections
will be free from violence, the Students Solidarity Trust is rallying
its constituency towards a peaceful election through setting up
public early warning systems, involving communities at risk and
facilitating public education and awareness on election violence.
SST has tried and tested systems, structures and personnel ever
ready for election processes, setting up early warning systems and
early responses and social safety nets.
SST contends
that for Zimbabwe to have peaceful elections, both during run up
and in the post election period, election violence needs to be addressed
on the level at which it is carried out through developing trust
at the grass root level that would weather possible calls for violence
coming from politicians or from any other sources for that matter.
SST is rolling out activities aimed at developing trust and confidence
among and between contestants and voters, a phenomenon that has
characterized the peaceful holding of elections by the American
election system as witnessed also in the recently concluded November
Election. In that election the losing candidate conceded defeat
and congratulated the winning candidate - President Obama. SST is
building relationships among students and youths across the political
divide, abused by politicians in the past by using them to perpetrate
violence, which relationships are aimed at preventing violence and
creating citizens who refuse to take part in violence and encourage
others to do similarly.
These efforts
by the Student Solidarity Trust are its contributions to the obtaining
environment where calls for non-violence are heard and accepted
by the politicians and the general public. President Mugabe and
Prime Minister Tsvangirai of late are on record for calling for
peaceful elections. To further consolidate such calls the SST activities
shall continue to deliberately connect youths and students from
different regions and enhance inter-regional activities. This is
in light of the tendency by some politicians to thrive on politicization
of regionalism and ethnicity to seek undue electoral advantage.
The SST constituency is on guard to document and expose election
related corruption, ineffective electoral processes and institutions,
weak judiciary and unaccountable police personnel, impunity and
criminal gangs and militias taking advantage of electioneering.
The organization
will be promoting its constituency's election related rights
including freedom to form, join and affiliate to organizations and
or political parties, freedom of expression of preference to a party
or candidate, right to vote, right to contest elections, right by
contestants to compete for support or votes and right to a free
and fair election.
Visit the Students
Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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