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ZIMBABWE:
Smaller parties hamstrung by lack of funds
IRIN
News
February 24, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45766
HARARE - Small
Zimbabwean parties and independents are complaining that 'unfair
legislation' is freezing them out of the forthcoming elections by
denying them access to government funding for political campaigns.
The polls, to be held
on 31 March, will see the ruling the ZANU-PF face off against the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), two minor opposition parties
- ZANU (Ndonga) and the Zimbabwe Youth in Alliance (ZIYA) - as well
as 14 independents, among them the former minister of information,
Jonathan Moyo.
Four more smaller parties
failed to file nomination papers, despite their earlier intention
to run: the Democratic Party (DP), ZAPU a former liberation movement;
the National Alliance for Good Governance (NAGG); and the Multi-racial
Christian Democrats.
Wilson Kumbula, the president
of ZANU (Ndonga), which has a single seat in the outgoing parliament,
told IRIN that his party's ambition to field candidates in all 120
constituencies had been dashed by a critical shortage of money to
bankroll their campaign.
"We are now being
forced to reduce the number of candidates to run in the March elections
because of the prohibitive costs of doing so - the threshold is
just too high," Kumbula said.
The party will field
just nine candidates, and Kumbula blames the recently announced
hike in candidate's fees, as well as the government's failure to
cater for smaller parties when allocating money for election campaigns,
as the main reasons for this.
"All along, we had
been made to believe that the fees would be low and manageable,
but we were surprised at the sudden sharp rise, with barely two
months to go to elections," he added.
In a statutory instrument
published in the first week of February, the registration fee for
a candidate rose by 2,000 percent from Zim $100,000 (about US $17)
to Zim $2 million ($330).
The steep rise meant
ZANU (Ndonga) would have had to fork out Zim $240 million ($39,675)
instead of Zim $12 million ($1,983).
In addition, parties
now have to pay Zim $5 million ($826) for a copy of the voters'
roll per constituency, up from the previous Zim $200,000 ($34),
amounting to Zim $600 million ($99,200) to obtain the roll for every
constituency.
"This is a gimmick
to deter the opposition from contesting, because the government
knows there is nowhere we can get that kind of money, especially
given that there is hardly any time before the elections. Besides
the fees for registration and the voters' roll, we need money to
feed our campaign teams, provide transport and fuel, the printing
and distribution of campaign material as well as advertising our
manifesto," Kumbula complained.
Margaret Dongo, an independent
standing in the Harare central constituency, said the Political
Parties (Finance) Act, which spells out conditions under which political
parties can access funding from the government, disadvantaged small
parties.
The act states that each
political party whose candidates received at least five percent
of the total number of votes cast in the most recent general election
is entitled to a proportional amount of money from a special fund.
In the last elections,
only ZANU-PF and the MDC received more than five percent, meaning
that they were the only parties eligible to claim from the fund.
ZANU-PF received Zim $3.5 billion ($578,608) and the MDC got Zim
$3 billion ($495,949) for their campaigns.
Under the Political Parties
Act, it is illegal for a political party or any of its members to
accept foreign donations, whether directly from the donor or indirectly
through a third party.
"Clearly, the act
places hurdles in the way of the opposition. It is virtually impossible
for an independent like myself to obtain any funding from the state
because I can never achieve the five percent spelt out by the law,"
Dongo told IRIN.
A liberation war veteran,
Dongo was Zimbabwe's lone opposition legislator between 1995 and
2000 after splitting from ZANU-PF.
Dongo said she has been
forced to dig deep into her own savings to finance her campaign,
which covers 25 Harare suburbs. Businesspeople and companies she
has approached have not been forthcoming - they complain that the
economy is bad, but analysts say local donors are sceptical about
candidates running as independents.
ZANU-PF information secretary,
Nathan Shamuyarira, has defended the Political Parties (Finance)
Act, saying those who were attacking it were doing so to gain "undeserved
attention".
"There is no way
in which those small parties can be given money, because they hardly
command any following," Shamuyarira told IRIN. "These
parties should grow big first, before they can start claiming any
money."
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