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ZIMBABWE:
Conference aims to promote electoral reforms
IRIN News
Juky 29, 2004
Http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42439
[ This report does not
necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
HARARE, 29 Jul 2004 (IRIN)
- The Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN), in conjunction with
the Electoral Institute of Southern Africa (EISA), will hold a regional
conference on electoral reforms in the resort town of Victoria Falls
next week.
Rindai Chipfunde-Vava,
the ZESN national director, told IRIN the conference on 2 to 3 August
would run under the theme 'Regional Initiatives for Electoral Reform
in SADC: Strengthening Democratic Transformation Through Identified
Benchmarks in the Region'.
"The aim of the
conference is to create a platform on which delegates will share
experiences in electoral reform initiatives in the region. Delegates
to the conference have been drawn from regional parliaments and
civic organisations, and they will discuss what electoral stakeholders
in the region have agreed are best practices for electoral management,
monitoring and observation," Chipfunde-Vava said.
"We hope to create
consensus on the best practices in election administration and management,
particularly at this critical time in the region's history,"
she added.
Several countries are
facing elections within the next 12 months, with Zimbabwe holding
a highly charged parliamentary poll in March 2005. Zimbabwe's presidential
ballot in 2003 was condemned as flawed by some international observers,
and as a result the country was suspended from the Commonwealth.
The Zimbabwean government
has indicated that it will implement electoral reforms before next
year's poll. The proposed reforms include reducing the voting period
to one day, using transparent ballot boxes and the appointment by
President Mugabe of an Independent Electoral Commission.
However, opposition Movement
for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai has said he has little
faith in the new proposals.
"People are still
demanding more measures towards a democratic order. To be effective,
electoral reforms need a solid backing of independent institutions
dealing with electoral disputes, handling political excesses and
taking care of the whole electoral process. There is a deep lack
of trust and fear of electoral fraud - factors that could lead many
to conclude that their vote and their voices are worthless and,
therefore, inconsequential," Tsvangirai said.
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