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Mauritius
Watch Issue 22
Sokwanele
Extracted
from Issue 22
March
28, 2005
On 17 August
2004, the Southern African Development Community (SADC) leaders
meeting in Mauritius adopted the SADC Principles and Guidelines
Governing Democratic Elections. Zimbabwe, as a member of SADC, also
signed the Declaration and committed itself to implementing the
standards. The Mugabe regime claims that it is compliant with these
standards and thereby invites a comparison between its own electoral
and security legislation and its actions on the one hand, and the
SADC Principles and Guidelines on the other.
For 22 weeks
now "Mauritius Watch" has tracked the performance of the
Mugabe regime, providing an objective and non-partisan assessment
of its compliance with these principles and guidelines. Week by
week in the run-up to the 2005 Parliamentary Elections, we have
chronicled the regime’s more blatant breaches of the SADC standards.
Over this period a very clear picture has emerged, on which we have
commented from time to time.
What do the
various electoral observers and analysts have to say about the process
which is due to be completed with the national poll, just days away
now? We will be bringing you a summary of the findings of the different
monitoring groups, human rights, labour, civic and church groups
in a Special Edition of Mauritius Watch which we intend to publish
on the eve of the elections.
For our part
we are persuaded by the overwhelming weight of evidence, carefully
assessed over a period in excess of six months, that the elections
are deeply flawed, in no way satisfy the SADC principles and guidelines,
and cannot possibly be considered "free and fair".
Our views are
best summarised by the words of Elinor Sisulu in a recent article
she contributed to the Sunday Times (the full text of which is given
below). Ms Sisulu said:
"If awards
were given out for successfully rigged elections Zimbabwe would
rank among the leading nations in the world. The Zimbabwe government
has become a past master of cynically manipulating elections to
ensure victory for the ruling party, ZANU-PF"
24.03.05
: OPPOSITION SUPPORTERS DENIED FOOD
Villagers in the rural constituency of Insiza have denounced
the government and the ruling ZANU-PF party for denying them food
in order to force them to vote for the ruling party in next week’s
parliamentary election. Reports of the most blatant votes-for-food
electioneering by ZANU-PF come in the wake of Robert Mugabe’s assurances
that no Zimbabweans would starve. The regime which all along claimed
it had registered a bumper harvest last year, now admits there is
a serious food shortage.
According to
villagers who were interviewed last week, ZANU-PF district structures
operating under the party’s candidate for the area, Andrew Langa,
have given them two choices for their survival. They must either
vote for ZANU-PF and get food relief or support the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) party and go without food … Most of
the villagers interviewed said they would rather die of hunger than
back ZANU-PF, a party they have never supported in their lives.
(Comments from
the villagers are reported in the article which appeared on the
Daily News Online Edition: www.daily-news.co.za
24.03.05)
Note:
The Solidarity Peace Trust report of November 2004 estimates that
a minimum of 300 000 Zimbabweans – 1 in 40 – have been beaten,
tortured or denied food since 2000. Foodnet, an international
organisation, estimates that over 5 million people, almost half
the population, are verging on starvation.
SADC
standards breached
- 2.1.3 Political
tolerance
- 4.1.1 Constitutional
and legal guarantees of freedom and rights of the citizens
- 4.1.2 Conducive
environment for free, fair and peaceful elections
- 7.4 (Government
to) safeguard the human and civil liberties of all citizens including
the freedom of movement, assembly, association, expression and
campaigning … during the electoral process
- 7.7 (Government
to) ensure that adequate security is provided to all parties participating
in the elections
25.03.05
: UNMONITORED VOTING BY SOLDIERS
The March 31 election has been plunged into fresh controversy
that threatens to undermine its credibility totally, with the revelation
that the uniformed forces, seen as sympathetic to ZANU-PF, have
already cast their ballots. Although the Electoral Act allows members
of the armed forces to vote ahead of time, opposition groups are
deeply suspicious about the covert way in which the exercise was
undertaken, and the lack of any independent monitoring.
The announcement
by Justice George Chiweshe, chairman of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(ZEC), that the ballots were sealed on March 18, 13 days before
voting day, was met with surprise and outrage by the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). Chiweshe refused to disclose
the number of votes cast or the constituencies in which they were
cast – information which is considered essential to prevent major
fraud by this means.
MDC spokesperson
Paul Themba Nyathi protested about the lack of consultation with
his party and expressed concern about the neutrality of the senior
army officers involved in the process. Analysts also expressed concern
about the fact that the ballots had been sealed ahead of the training
of presiding officers and polling officers.
(Reported in
News 24 (SA): www.news24.com
24.03.05)
Note:
Senior officials of the uniformed forces, who have been given
commercial farms, luxury vehicles and other benefits by the Mugabe
regime, have openly stated in the past that they would never recognize
an MDC-led government.
SADC
standards breached
- 2.1.3 Political
tolerance
- 2.1.6 Equal
opportunity to exercise the right to vote and be voted for
- 4.1.1 Constitutional
and legal guarantees of freedom and rights of the citizens
- 7.4 (Government
to) safeguard the human and civil liberties of all citizens including
the freedom of movement, assembly, association, expression and
campaigning
- 7.5 (Government
to) take all necessary measures and precautions to prevent the
perpetration of fraud, rigging or any other illegal practices
throughout the whole electoral process
26.03.05
: SENIOR POLICE OFFICERS USE UNFAIR INFLUENCE
Junior police officers in the opposition-supporting Matabeleland
region, who voted last week by postal ballot, were ordered to sing
the national anthem first before voting and to place their ballot
papers in envelopes bearing their names. They were also harangued
by senior officers into voting for ZANU-PF.
Hundreds of
police officers interviewed told of how they were called out to
station parade squares and addressed by senior commanders who reminded
them they should vote to defend Zimbabwe’s sovereignty and not sell
the gains of independence back to British Prime Minister, Tony Blair
– standard ZANU-PF campaigning rhetoric.
Opposition MDC
spokesperson Paul Themba Nyathi said that his party would definitely
be challenging this kind of postal ballot "because not all
political parties were represented there to see to it that the system
is fair."
(Reported in
Zim Online:
www.zimonline.co.za 26.03.05)
- 7.5 (Government
to) take all necessary measures and precautions to prevent the
perpetration of fraud, rigging or any other illegal practices
throughout the whole electoral process …
- 7.9 (Government
to) ensure the transparency and integrity of the entire electoral
process by facilitating the deployment of representatives of political
parties …. and by accrediting national and / other observers /
monitors
24.03.05
: ELECTORAL BODIES UNDER FIRE
With parliamentary elections only days away, Zimbabwe’s electoral
authorities have come under fire for practices which the opposition
and an observer group have pointed out could be used to rig the
ballot. They cited as reasons for concern unmonitored voting by
soldiers (referred to above), the influence of traditional chiefs
on voting and the fact that voters were still being registered,
although voter registration officially ended on February 4 (story
below).
In the first
indication of criticism by official observers, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka,
head of an observer delegation from SADC, said she was "not
satisfied with the explanation of the authorities about constant
complaints that ZANU-PF had ensured that traditional chiefs would
control voting queues at polling stations to ensure people voted
for ZANU-PF."
The Zimbabwe
Support Election Network (ZSEN) a private voluntary organisation,
last week published a list of 25 polling stations which it said
were situated at the homes of chiefs and in military bases.
(See the full
report in News 24 (SA): www.news24.com
24.03.05)
(Also reported in Zim Online: www.zimonline.co.za
24.03.05)
Note:
Traditional chiefs are allocated 10 of the 30 parliamentary seats
appointed directly by Mugabe. Last year, the government increased
the monthly allowances of chiefs countrywide from $500 000 to
a non-taxable $1 million. More than 50 percent of the chiefs have
so far benefited under a heavily subsidized vehicle scheme similar
to that accorded to parliamentarians.
The subsidies
are fuelled by money from peasants fined for numerous offences
over which chiefs now enjoy jurisdiction. Most of the chiefs have
also had their homesteads electrified and boreholes sunk to make
them as amenable to ZANU- PF’s whims as possible. (See full reports
in the Herald of 1.2.05 and in the Zimbabwe Independent of 7.9.05)
SADC
standards breached
- 2.1.7 Independence
of the Judiciary and impartiality of electoral institutions
- 7.3 (Government
to) establish impartial, all-inclusive, competent and accountable
national electoral bodies …
24.03.05
: VOTERS STILL BEING REGISTERED
The Registrar-General’s office is still registering voters more
than a month after the closure of the current registration exercise
and only days before the elections. It is reported that the registration
process is in full swing in some areas, especially in Norton, where
people are being bussed in from informal settlements such as Tongagara
on the outskirts of Harare.
Registrar-General
Tobaiwa Mudede admitted that voters were still being registered,
though he claimed that those registered after the February 4 deadline
would not be permitted to vote in this parliamentary election. He
did not say how their right to vote would be distinguished from
the rights of others registered before February 4. Harare Central
independent candidate Margaret Dongo, claims that those being registered
after the deadline will have their names included in the supplementary
voters’ roll which is yet to be made public. She alleges that Mudede
deliberately delayed issuing the supplementary roll to accommodate
these new voters.
The Zimbabwe
Independent also cites evidence that only confirmed ZANU-PF supporters
are being allowed to register late.
(See the full
report in The Zimbabwe Independent: www.theindependent.co.zw
24.03.05)
Note:
On February 24, suspected ruling ZANU-PF party militants waylaid
and severely beat up an opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) party campaign team at Norton. The town falls under the
Manyame constituency in which Robert Mugabe’s nephew, Patrick
Zhuwawo, is standing against the MDC’s Hilda Mafudze in the March
poll.
SADC
standards breached
- 2.1.6 Equal
opportunity to exercise the right to vote and be voted for
- 2.1.7 Independence
of the Judiciary and impartiality of the electoral institutions
- 4.1.3 Non-discrimination
in the voters’ registration
- 4.1.4 Existence
of updated and accessible voters’ roll
- 7.3 (Government
to) establish impartial, all-inclusive, competent and accountable
national electoral bodies
14.03.05
: NEUTRALITY OF ELECTORAL COMMISSION IN DOUBT
In a move that has raised further serious doubts about the neutrality
of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), set up recently by the
Mugabe regime to oversee the forthcoming parliamentary election,
the commission has appealed to the Supreme Court against a decision
of the Electoral Court to allow jailed Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) candidate Roy Bennett to contest the poll.
The electoral
court, whose verdict is intended to be final and not subject to
appeal, last week overturned a decision by Nomination Court officials
to bar Bennett from contesting because he is in prison. Bennett,
one of the MDC’s most popular MPs, was jailed by parliament last
year after the ruling ZANU-PF party used its majority to vote for
him to be sent to prison for 12 months for pushing Justice Minister
Patrick Chinamasa to the floor when the latter had taunted him severely
in the House.
Electoral Court
judge Tendai Uchena however over-ruled the Nomination Court officials.
He nullified the ban on Bennett and postponed polling in his Chimanimani
constituency from March 31 to April 30 to allow the opposition candidate
time to campaign. The judge’s ruling angered Robert Mugabe who attacked
it in public, saying it was unacceptable.
The latest move
of the ZEC to appeal Justice Uchena’s judgment to the Supreme Court
is by inference an endorsement of Mugabe’s view. MDC spokesperson
Paul Themba Nyathi questioned the ZEC’s wisdom and said it put the
commission’s neutrality in question.
(Report in Zim
Online: www.zimonline.co.za
24.03.05)
Note:
The members of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, the Electoral
Supervisory Commission, the Delimitation Commission and the Registrar
General of Voters have all been handpicked by Mugabe.
SADC
standards breached
- 2.1.7 Independence
of the Judiciary and impartiality of the electoral institutions
- 7.3 (Government
to) establish impartial, all-inclusive, competent and accountable
national electoral bodies …
24.03.05 : ABUSE OF CHILDREN IN MUGABE’S CAMPAIGN
As ZANU-PF becomes increasingly embarrassed by the poor turnout
of voters at its rallies, the party has resorted to filling the
large gaps with docile school children who are in no position to
protest their exploitation.
In what has
now become a feature of Robert Mugabe’s own campaign rallies, again
and again innocent children are made to sit in the baking sun for
hours on end, awaiting the arrival of the "royal" motorcade.
In one instance children at Tafara High School were huddled together
like sheep in the open ground and made to wait in excess of five
hours, to ensure there was a respectable number gathered when the
aging leader appeared. The youth militia or "Green Bombers"
were used to marshal the school children and keep them from complaining.
One parent,
Aaron Mpofu, whose son attends the primary school in Tafara, complained
bitterly over the use of children in political campaigns.
"Our children
went to school at 8.00 am," he said, "and were not allowed
to leave the school grounds by the militia manning the gates. They
spent the whole day hungry but the president only came after 3.00
pm. This is not fair at all."
More than 300
kilometres east of the capital, in Chimanimani, hundreds of schoolchildren
were forced to walk a gruelling five- kilometre journey to Gaza
Stadium, the venue of another of Mugabe’s rallies last week.
University of
Zimbabwe law lecturer Lovemore Madhuku, said the practice amounted
to abuse of children.
(Reported in
Zim Online: www.zimonline.co.za
24.03.05)
SADC
standards breached
- 4.1.1 Constitutional
and legal guarantees of freedom and rights of the citizens
- 4.1.2 Conducive
environment for free, fair and peaceful elections
- 7.4 (Government
to) safeguard the human and civil liberties of all citizens including
the freedom of movement, assembly, association (and) expression
… during the electoral process
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