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Nomination
of candidates and the 2005 Zimbabwe parliamentary elections
Claude
Kabemba
Extracted from the EISA Election newsletter No. 19
March 08, 2005
The new Electoral
Act in Part XII provides detailed information pertaining to the nomination
of candidates for election as Members of Parliament. Any person who wishes
to stand as a candidate for election has to lodge his or her nomination
papers signed by no fewer than ten persons who are registered on the voter’s
roll for the constituency for which the candidate seeks election and countersigned
with the acceptance of the candidate or his or her chief election agent.
Candidates are requested to lodge their application with the constituency
Elections Officer. The Elections Officer verifies all documentation. When
necessary he/she gives an opportunity to candidates to rectify any defect.
The rectification takes place within the nomination time limits.
The nomination
process
The nominations
of candidates for the 2005 parliamentary elections were the first to be
conducted under the new Independent Electoral Commission. The nomination
was a one day process and it took place on 18 February 2005. The Electoral
Commission set up Nomination Courts in the different constituencies. The
nomination of candidates went more smoothly than expected and there were
no serious complaints from either the ruling party or the opposition.
All opposition political parties - the Movement for Democratic Change,
Zanu, Zimbabwe Youth Alliance and independent candidates expressed satisfaction
with the process. The MDC Secretary-general, Professor Welshman Ncube
said: "on the balance, the fact that all candidates who wanted to
participate in the elections managed to secure their candidature shows
that the process was conducted well".
The politics of
nomination
The issue
of birth certificates was potentially problematic and confusing. The Minister
of Land, Justice and Legal Affairs called for candidates to submit their
applications together with their "long" birth certificates.
Zimbabwe has two kinds of certificates – "short" birth certificates
issued before independence and "long: ones issued after independence.
This was seen by some as a way of unlawfully disqualifying certain candidates
who were born before independence in 1980. Fortunately, this decision
was reversed by the Independent Electoral Commission. Both certificates
were used by candidates to register.
The major concern
during these nominations was the high cost of standing as a candidate.
In February the registration fee for a candidate rose by 2000 percent
from Zim $ 100, 000 (about US $17) to Zim $ 2 million ($US 330). This
simply means that a party which might have paid only Zim $ 12 million
($ US 1,983) to fill candidates in all the 120 constituencies was asked
to pay Zim $ 240 million ($ US 39,675). There is no doubt that this might
have disqualified badly funded parties such as ZANU (Ndonga) and the Zimbabwe
Youth Alliance (ZIYA). Opposition claims that this approach was designed
deliberately to limit their ability to have candidates in all constituencies.
Concerns were expressed,
however, by certain individuals whose applications were rejected. For
example all suspended Zanu-PF provincial chairmen who took part in Jonathan
Moyo’s Tsholotsho meeting, had their applications rejected. The Tsholotsho
meeting was an unsanctioned secret succession meeting which Jonathan Moyo
orchestrated as a plot against the Zanu-PF's top leadership. The meeting
aimed at promoting a rival candidate to President Robert Mugabe's choice
(Joice Mujuru) for the post of vice-president. Moyo was sidelined and
had no option but to stand as an independent candidate.
Another candidate-Joshua
Mhambi was disqualified when he failed to produce an original copy of
his national identity document. It is alleged that he was born in Zambia
and had never renounced his Zambian citizenship. David Coltart’s application
was successful after it was initially rejected on the grounds that his
mother was a South African. Another member of the MDC, Roy Bennet, who
is currently under arrest, was disqualified. His wife filed for the same
constituency. While Zanu-PF lost one of its sitting MP’s - Jonathan Moyo,
the MDC lost four sitting MPs who filed as independents. The two main
political parties Zanu-PF and MDC will contest in all 120 constituencies.
The rest of the opposition parties - Zanu-Ndonga and the Zimbabwe Youth
Alliance - have restricted their participation to a few constituencies.
It is also understood that the MDC has filed a significant number of white
candidates in various constituencies. It is important to mention this
as it begins to bring out the ideological characteristics of the main
political parties. This to Zanu-PF could suggest that the MDC is the stooge
of whites; for MDC, the approach could be an attempt to show that it is
prepared for reconciliation and that it adopts the politics of accommodation.
It is important to
note that in most of these cases the Independent Electoral Commission
demonstrated some level of impartiality and autonomy in taking decisions.
Each Electoral Court announced the approved list of candidates and the
Electoral Commission’s job was simply to publish a consolidated list of
the constituencies. The table below gives the number of political parties’
candidates and independents and indicates the gender representation.
Table: Number of
candidates per party and the gender balance
|
Party/Independents
|
Numbers
|
Male
|
Female
|
|
Independents
|
17
|
13
|
4
|
|
MDC
|
120
|
111
|
9
|
|
ZANU-Ndonga
|
11
|
8
|
3
|
|
ZANU-PF
|
120
|
99
|
21
|
|
ZIYA
|
2
|
2
|
0
|
Only the MDC and Zanu-PF
have candidates in all 120 of the constituencies. The dominance of male
candidates in the Zimbabwe election is strong. All groups perform badly
in terms of gender and have failed to achieve the SADC gender representation
requirement of 30% and if one considers that the deadline to achieve this
is 2005, Zimbabwe with 37 women candidates out of a total of 270 candidates
who will compete in the election, is indeed lagging far behind.
Conclusion
Contrary
to previous nomination processes, the nomination for 2005 parliamentary
elections went smoothly without any major disruption. In the past, problems
during nomination occurred for two reasons: confusion about the location
for nomination and inadequate briefing on the procedures which contributed
to candidates failing to apply in an even-handed manner. The Zimbabwe
Election Support Network reported that in the most recent elections, the
Nomination Courts were key problem areas for opposition and independent
candidates. For example, it says, in the 2002 Rural District Council Elections,
the MDC claimed that hundreds of its prospective candidates were physically
prevented from reaching the Nomination Courts by ruling party supporters.
Similar allegations were made for several councils in the 2003 Urban Council
elections where the ruling party won all the council seats in three councils
amid allegations of serious violence and intimidation of the opposition.
This time, it seems, election officials at the Nomination Courts were
well briefed. No obstructions or violence were reported during the nomination
process.
References
Electoral
Act, No 25/2004
SundayTimes.co.za,
19 February, 2005
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