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Military
to run election
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 15, 15-Mar-05)
By * Chipo Sithole
in Harare
March 15, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_015_2_eng.txt
New law allows
key Mugabe allies to take prominent role in parliamentary ballot.
Three years after the Zimbabwean
military covertly ran a presidential poll which enabled Robert Mugabe
to retain supreme power in Zimbabwe, the army will again fill all the
key positions for this month's parliamentary elections - legally this
time.
A new Electoral Act was signed
into law by Mugabe in January that permits military, police and prison
officers to staff the Electoral Supervisory Commission, ESC, and to run
both the voting and the counting at 8,200 counting stations. In addition,
thousands of youth militiamen and women, answerable directly to the president,
will be drafted into the military before polling day so that they too
can serve in counting stations.
The opposition Movement for
Democratic Change, MDC, will be allowed to place only one election agent
in each of the polling and counting stations - a number it claims is totally
inadequate to monitor the vote and the count properly.
The key appointment is that
of recently retired army brigadier Kennedy Zimondi as chief election officer.
Sources told IWPR that Zimondi and other military officers seconded to
the ESC are working out of the main offices of the Central Intelligence
Organisation, CIO, at Hardwicke House in the centre of the capital Harare.
"They have already finished
scrutinising the voters' roll and are now doing an intelligence appreciation
of the situation before the election," said the source.
"There are two men - Major
Sibindi, from Sixth Army headquarters, and Major Kampira, from Presidential
Guard headquarters - who are also involved. This duo has been working
on elections since before the presidential poll in
2002. They were part of a large military network assigned [illegally]
to the presidential election."
The military, theoretically
neutral but in fact loyal to Mugabe and ZANU PF, will collaborate closely
with the ruling party's National Command Centre, NCC. An ad hoc body that
functions mainly in election periods, the NCC is run by ZANU PF's national
political commissar Elliott Manyika.
A new and supposedly independent
Zimbabwe Election Commission, ZEC, was set up to comply with guidelines
set down by the 14-state Southern African Development Community, SADC,
for the conduct of a "free and fair" election. But the ZEC amounts
to virtually powerless window dressing, which is anyway answerable to
the real power, Brigadier Zimondi's ESC.
"The strategy is to get
people in key positions who share the hard-line attitudes of the government,"
said Lovemore Mdhuku, chairman of the National Constitutional Assembly,
an opposition coalition of churches, trade unions and other civil society
organisations. "You appoint the military because they follow orders.
They will do what is required."
John Makumbe, a political scientist
at the University of Zimbabwe, said, "To shore up his military support,
Mugabe recently gave pay rises of up to 1,400 per cent to the troops.
He has also given top officers big commercial farms confiscated from white
farmers by the government. The army and police services also purged and
punished thousands in the junior ranks suspected of supporting Mugabe's
opponents."
"The big issue remains
what happens on polling day," commented Eddie Cross, an MDC national
executive member and economics spokesman.
"Remember what Josef Stalin
said, 'It is not who votes that counts, but who counts the vote.' He said
that a long time ago, but it remains true to this day. And this time in
Zimbabwe we know who will do that because the military and the CIO are
running the entire elections system."
* Chipo Sithole
is the pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Harare.
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