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Zimbabwe:
Insufficient provision for elderly and infirm voters
IRIN News
March
29, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46360
HARARE -
NGOs have lamented the lack of special arrangements for elderly
and infirm voters ahead of Zimbabwe's legislative elections on 31
March.
Mary Madya,
25, a widow from Mufakose suburb in the capital, Harare, is one
of many eligible voters living with AIDS who will be unable to vote
on polling day. Eight months ago she was able to register as a voter,
but after prolonged hospitalisation she is now bedridden and frail.
"I believe that
my vote could make the difference. I was so happy when I voted in
the 2000 parliamentary elections and the 2002 presidential elections,
because it is my democratic right to choose a political leader of
my own choice.
"But things
have suddenly moved for the worse [for me] - even though I registered
as a voter with the hope of casting my ballot this time around,
I cannot do so because I can hardly walk now," Madya told IRIN.
According to
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), 5.7 million Zimbabweans
have registered to vote in the forthcoming election. Experts have
been reported as claiming that more than a million adults living
with AIDS may not be able to cast their ballots.
Believe Dliwayo,
a spokesman for Zimbabwe Activists on HIV and AIDS (ZAHA), told
IRIN it was "obvious" even in the absence of a full study, that
"a significant portion of the voting population", weakened by HIV/AIDS,
would not be able to get to polling stations.
"Statistics
show that about a quarter of Zimbabweans live with HIV/AIDS. A good
part of this figure is people whose ability to engage in normal
activities is greatly compromised," Dliwayo commented. "They include
those who suffer opportunistic infections and ... it is safe to
say participating in such things as voting is difficult for them."
Rindai Chipfunde,
national coordinator of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN),
told IRIN that the authorities had made "no provision for sick people,
neither do we have polling stations located at hospitals or even
at old-age homes - there's no provision for that".
"In Namibia
there were polling stations at hospitals and old-age homes; in South
Africa provision was made for special votes, with officials even
going to [elderly and infirm] people's homes. The problem, of course,
is knowing where those people reside; it happens in South Africa,
but it requires adequate preparation," Chipfunde said.
She said ZESN
would continue "lobbying for reforms, like brail materials for the
blind". Although assisted voters could go to the polls, they had
to cast their ballots in the presence of a police officer and a
presiding officer. Chipfunde said this arrangement was unsatisfactory
as it could add an element of intimidation to the voting process.
Meanwhile, Madya's
55-year-old mother, Edeline Moyo, also a registered voter, doubted
she would be able to stand in the queue to vote on election day.
"Like my daughter,
I cherish my vote, having gone to the polls since independence in
1980. But I doubt if I will be able to go and vote now because of
the burden that is before me - Mary needs constant attention and,
unfortunately, there is no one to help me look after her. All my
other daughters are married and are living with their families outside
Harare. Besides, I also have to fend for my daughter's two children,
who moved in with their mother when their father died," Moyo told
IRIN.
"I was expecting
those who are contesting in the elections to say something about
AIDS, and how best to cater for the ill, but I have not heard anything
like that. All their campaign speeches are about different things,
and this discourages some of us from voting, as we know the pain
of living with the sick," she remarked.
David Chimhini,
director of the Zimbabwe Civic Education Trust, questioned why the
government had not made provision for polling stations to be set
up at hospitals and clinics, as was done during a by-election last
year, because sick rural voters were more likely to be disenfranchised
than sick urban voters.
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