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ZIMBABWE:
ZANU-PF wins by-election
IRIN
News
September 06, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=43050
[ This report does not
necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
JOHANNESBURG - Zimbabwe's
ruling ZANU-PF party moved a step closer to gaining total control
of parliament after it won a new parliamentary seat from the main
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) at a weekend by-election.
ZANU-PF recaptured the
Seke parliamentary seat by default after the MDC boycotted the poll,
in line with a decision it took last month to suspend its participation
in all elections, alleging the lack of transparency and fairness
in electoral processes.
The ruling party now
holds 98 of 150 seats in parliament, two short of the two-thirds
majority it would need to amend the constitution.
"We are sticking
to our guns and will continue to suspend our participation in elections
until the government adheres to SADC [Southern African Development
Community] guidelines on free and fair polls," MDC spokesman
Paul Themba Nyathi told IRIN on Monday.
"Too much is being
made over the possibility of ZANU-PF assuming full control of the
parliament, but the government already makes laws which violate
the constitution," he noted.
The protocol, agreed
in Mauritius last month by the 14-nation SADC bloc, guarantees equal
access to the state media and freedom of association, which the
MDC has claimed was "severely lacking" in Zimbabwe.
"In the lead-up
to next year's parliamentary elections we will focus our attention
on pressurising the government to stick to the protocol," Themba
Nyathi said.
Meanwhile, scores of
NGO workers are expected to take to the streets on Tuesday to protest
impending legislation that will require all NGOs to register with
a government-appointed regulatory council and disclose details of
their programmes and funding.
If passed, the proposed
Non-Governmental Organisations Bill will also clamp down on foreign
NGOs concerned principally with "issues of governance".
The draft bill
is expected to be tabled in parliament in October for discussion
and debate.
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