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ZIMBABWE:
MDC calls for postponement of poll
IRIN News
January 25, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45230
Johannesburg
- Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), said his party has yet to decide whether to participate
in Zimbabwe's legislative elections, scheduled for March, as conditions
in the country are not conducive to a free and fair poll.
Tsvangirai was addressing
delegates at a conference on opposition parties and democracy in
Africa at the South African Institute of International Affairs in
Johannesburg on Tuesday. Given the number of reforms needed to ensure
a free and fair election, he said, the parliamentary poll should
be postponed to June.
The MDC was "damned
if we do, and damned if we don't" participate in the March
election. If the MDC participated in a ballot under the current
conditions, it would be tantamount to "legitimising fraud";
if they chose not to participate, "you [could] become irrelevant",
Tsvangirai commented.
The MDC leader outlined
key impediments to the MDC participating in the poll: chief among
them was the lack of democratic space for his party to campaign,
and ongoing intimidation and politically motivated violence. Both
previous legislative and presidential elections had been marred
by "state-sponsored violence", and this would need to
cease if the upcoming ballot were to be declared free and fair.
"People have lost
confidence in the electoral process; they have experienced too many
fraudulent elections, in which their vote has been meaningless.
This has to change - the current electoral and political environment
precludes a free and fair election," Tsvangirai alleged.
Curbs on holding public
meetings were also affecting his party's ability to contest elections.
"If we have a meeting with three or more people ... we have
to ask permission from the police". Under the Public Order
and Security Act (POSA), political parties have to obtain clearance
from the police to hold a gathering.
The opposition party
also had no access to state media and was therefore severely constrained
in its ability to campaign effectively. However, the government
has contended that because the opposition has not confirmed its
participation in the ballot, it does not qualify for airtime.
After delivering his
speech, Tsvangirai told the media he had been encouraged by recent
comments by South Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC)
that the MDC should be allowed to hold public meetings without having
to apply for permission from the police.
"Any support ...
is appreciated, but I don't know whether it will have any impact
in the next two months [before the scheduled elections]. The government
is going full throttle, regardless of comments from outside [the
country]," Tsvangirai said.
Both the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) had a role
to play in ensuring that member states adhered to principles and
guidelines governing elections.
"Given the public
policy and public position of SADC and the AU on freedom, liberty,
equity, economic management, governance and democracy, one would
have thought the two bodies could put together mechanisms for correction
and sanction, should a member state deliberately sabotage these
noble ideals," Tsvangirai observed.
"A new spirit has
taken root in the SADC region, to deal with the question of elections.
The [election] guidelines adopted in Mauritius last year [by SADC
countries] give us a lot of hope and encouragement: they are not
just SADC guidelines; they are universal requirements."
Zimbabwe, however, remained
out of step with the thinking of the rest of the region, he alleged.
"The reforms that
the government has made to the electoral laws, while a step in the
right direction, are nowhere near sufficient. Significant reform
measures are needed if the government is to comply with the new
SADC benchmarks on democratic elections. From the MDC's perspective,
the government needs to carry out the following, if credible elections
are to take place: the disbanding of the youth militias and their
complete removal from all constituencies; the repeal or amendment
of all legislative provisions that infringe upon basic civil and
political liberties; a comprehensive independent audit of the voters'
roll, and for those who have been unable to register, to be able
to do so; and access to the state media [for the opposition],"
Tsvangirai explained.
It would take six months
for these reforms to "have a meaningful impact on the electoral
and political environment". The MDC was therefore advocating
that the earliest that elections could take place would be the end
of June 2005. "We want to participate, but we don't want to
commit [political] suicide. Now the environment is very hostile,
and they [government] are nowhere near [full] compliance with SADC
guidelines," he noted.
The MDC was involved
in ongoing consultations over whether or not it would contest the
parliamentary elections, Tsvangirai said, and a decision would be
made during executive and council meetings to be held from 2 to
3 February.
"It is imperative
that we get this election right; that all stakeholders are comfortable
with the conditions and processes under which the election is held,"
he stressed. "Another disputed election would be bad news for
Zimbabwe, and bad news for the region."
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