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The
right sort of observers
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 20, 25-Mar-05)
By *Dzikamayi
Chidyausiku in Harare
March
25, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_020_1_eng.txt
South Africa
joins some less than democratic states invited to watch the election,
as anyone who might be critical is struck off the list.
Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe has devised a wide range of measures
to rig the country's sixth parliamentary election and to disguise
the extent of the falsification.
Perhaps the
most blatant and effective of these measures is the careful cherry-picking
of foreign delegations permitted to observe the conduct of the election
campaign and the count. Foreign Minister Stan Mudenge has invited
observers only from countries that have either openly supported
the ruling ZANU PF government or have maintained silence about the
country's prolonged political and human rights crisis.
Crucially, observer
teams from the United States, the Commonwealth, Australia, Japan,
the European Union, Britain and other European countries who were
intensely critical of Zimbabwe's last parliamentary election in
2000 and the
subsequent 2002 presidential election have been denied entry this
time round.
"They [Mugabe
and ZANU PF] have left out everybody who gave them a negative report,"
said John Makumbe, lecturer in political science at the University
of Zimbabwe. "In essence it says the regime has something to hide,
that it can't stand close scrutiny."
The observer
teams that have received invitations come from pro-Mugabe African
states such as South Africa, Tanzania and Namibia; other friendly
countries such as China, Iran, Venezuela and Russia; and from the
South African Development Community, SADC, the 14-member regional
grouping which pronounced as free and fair the last two internationally
criticised Zimbabwean polls.
Even the Atlanta-based
Carter Centre, one of the world's leading election monitoring organisations,
which has observed elections on every continent, was told it was
unwelcome when its monitors began arriving in Harare.
"Zimbabwe is
a disgrace," said former United States President Jimmy Carter, chairman
of the centre. "Mugabe declared that the Carter Centre is a terrorist
organisation and asked us to leave."
A host of African
regional civic organisations that have criticised past Zimbabwean
polls as neither free nor fair have also been excluded. They include
the autonomous SADC parliamentary delegation, made up of ordinary
members of southern African parliaments, which issued a report on
the 2002 presidential election that was so damning that the SADC
and African Union secretariats sat on it for two years before it
was released.
South Africa's
powerful trade union movement, the Congress of South African Trade
Unions, Cosatu, has been refused permission to send a mission. Cosatu
has expressed solidarity with the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions,
ZCTU, which was one of the leading founding components of the Movement
for Democratic Change, MDC, Zimbabwe's main opposition party.
Justifying the
ban on Cosatu, Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa said ZCTU leaders
had been "a regular feature at British Labour Party annual conferences
and have used the platform to call for international isolation of
the country [Zimbabwe] and the illegal removal of the legitimate
government."
The ZCTU itself
has been denied permission to place official observers at polling
and vote counting stations.
South Africa's
main independent election body, the Electoral Institute of Southern
Africa, which has been prominent in organising domestic elections
and observing more than twenty overseas votes, was also refused
permission for its 40 designated representatives to enter Zimbabwe.
The Harare-based
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, ZLHR, said the cherry-picking
process will have a serious impact on the credibility of the ballot
result. Other Zimbabwean non-government organisations and opposition
parties have also criticised the way the government has hand-picked
monitoring teams.
ZLHR executive
director Arnold Tsunga said, "There is no diversity in the kind
of observer teams invited by the government. The election will consequently
lose all credibility because the observer missions are not truly
representative of the international community as a whole."
Zimbabwean human
rights organisations and government opponents are particularly incensed
with South African President Thabo Mbeki and his labour minister,
Membathisi Mdladlana, who is leading the official South African
observer mission, who have both endorsed the poll as free and fair
before it has even happened.
"I have no reason
to think that anybody in Zimbabwe will act in a way that will militate
against the [Zimbabwe] elections being free and fair," Mbeki recently
told reporters on the steps of the South African parliament.
His early verdict
on the election was reinforced by Mdladlana, who said within 30
minutes of arriving in Zimbabwe that everything was "calm and smooth"
and that the ballot would be conducted properly.
Mdladlana said
too many people had drawn the conclusion that elections in Zimbabwe
would not be free and fair. "Those people are a problem and a nuisance,"
he said. "But nobody attacks them. Some of us are fed up with their
lies."
Welshman Ncube,
secretary general of the MDC, accused Mbeki and Mdladlana of adopting
a partisan stance that is "an affront to the ideals that guided
liberation struggles across Africa".
Ncube continued,
"The South Africans have let us down. History will judge them very
harshly indeed. They are trying to sanitise the illegitimate regime
of Robert Mugabe and ZANU PF. The South African government continues
to go out of its way to act as the servant of ZANU PF repression
against the people of Zimbabwe's struggle for democracy and freedom."
As a result
of Mladlana's remarks on his arrival in Zimbabwe, the MDC has declined
to talk to or cooperate with the South African observer team.
"There are serious
legitimacy and credibility issues surrounding the upcoming elections,"
said Tsunga. "If the government really believed free and fair elections
were about to be held, then it would have freely welcomed anyone
interested to observe them. By barring so many observer teams, the
government has shown that it has something to hide. The world will
have no confidence in the observers that have been selected."
The world's
two leading human rights organisations, Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch, have both issued damning reports saying the
situation on the ground makes it impossible to hold a free and fair
election. They said there has been massive intimidation and harassment
of government opponents by the army, police and Mugabe's personal
youth militia ahead of the polls.
In addition,
more than 50 journalists from states pronounced "unfriendly" by
President Mugabe have been denied accreditation to report on the
election campaign. Mugabe has accused the domestic independent media
and foreign correspondents of "printing lies and stirring up unrest
in the country".
Some journalists,
including a large team from the government-controlled South Africa
Broadcasting Corporation, have been admitted, but they have been
charged 600 US dollars per person for the privilege.
Repeated applications
for accreditation made by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting
have not even received a reply.
*Dzikamayi
Chidyausiku is a pseudonym used by a journalist in Zimbabwe.
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