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Unusually
large number of assisted voters in Zengeza by-election
Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN)
March 27, 2004
The March 27-28
Zengeza by-election kicked off today with an astonishingly large
number of voters requesting to have their ballots cast on their
behalf by polling officers.
Accredited supervisors
and observers from ZESN reported that among those seeking to have
their ballots cast on their behalf were a few elderly people with
the largest number coming from young people. Those seeking to be
assisted were claiming that they were illiterate, sick, had blurred
vision and had unsteady hands.
According to
official government reports, 159 people had been assisted to vote
by 10 am on the first day of polling. At Dudzai primary school,
ZESN supervisors observed a group of people being assisted to vote.
Initially there were few people being assisted but the number increased
steadily until a police officer allegedly under instructions from
the presiding officer instructed people who wanted to be assisted
to form a separate queue. When ZESN questioned the exercise, police
details started vetting those intending to be assisted.
Of concern to
ZESN was the heavy presence of armed soldiers and members of the
police force. At Seke 1 High School, where there was commotion as
people jostled to vote, a van full of armed security personnel was
parked just outside the polling station. Fears were that this had
the potential to instil fear among voters.
Another characteristic
that could be interpreted as intimidation was the writing down of
names of people and their national identity registration numbers
after casting their ballots.
At Seke High
1 School, ZESN observers overheard some women telling voters that
they would know which way they would have voted. At the same polling
station, guidelines and instructions on how to vote were stuck on
the wall with the example that voters should put their X next to
the Zanu PF candidate. The poster was removed when ZESN chairman,
Reginald Matchaba-Hove appeared.
At the same
school, ZESN observers were allegedly asked to sign the Official
Secrets Act, but they refused. They were asked to get out of the
polling station. ZESN is concerned about whether there are new regulations
governing elections.
Another issue
that was raised was the fact that an open-air polling station was
only announced on the eve of the election. Of interest was that
although the polling station was announced late, it recorded a high
voter turnout, the majority of whom belonged to the Apostolic Faith
religious sect.
Observers also
noticed that some people who had just voted were going to one/a
particular house where it could not be established what they were
doing.
Visit the ZESN
fact sheet
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