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Barred
election observers in Mudzi
Crisis Coalition
in Zimbabwe
March 30, 2005
Zimbabwe's forthcoming
parliamentary elections have again been dogged by controversy. The
District Administrator of Mudzi and sitting Member of Parliament
for Zanu PF, Ray Kaukonde allegedly sent teachers away whom the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission had deployed on the pretext that they
were MDC sympathizers.
This latest open defiance
of the SADC principles and guidelines that govern the conduct of
free and fair elections have further vindicated that Harare is yet
to fully comply with the guidelines. The involvement of the District
Administrator's office, an organ that has no mandate totally
in the running of elections, has cast further doubts over the autonomy
of the newly created body. Interestingly, Mudzi constituency is
renowned for political notoriety.
During the 2000 parliamentary
and 2002 presidential elections respectively, political violence
and rampant allegations of electoral fraud committed by ruling party
supporters rocked Mashonaland East province. It was also alleged
that opposition supporters were chased away at some polling stations
and in others election monitors did not access the polling centres.
The opposition MDC in their election petitions in the High Court
cited the cases when they disputed the two polls.
The incident also betrays
the promises of education for all, a principle envisaged by both
Zanu PF and the opposition MDC in their manifestos. Teachers are
an integral part of the education system, and their harassment is
diametrically opposed to the value of education. The latest information
from the Progressive Teachers' Union is that the teachers
are gathered at Harare Girls High awaiting deployment, after the
intervention of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission.
Raymond Majongwe, Secretary
General of the Progressive Teachers' Union blasted Ray Kaukonde
for stooping so low. "It is disturbing, that Ray Kaukonde,
for all his robust stature, could stoop so low as to accuse the
teachers that they are MDC supporters simply because they come from
Harare". One teacher, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
revealed that they were told if they observed the elections in Mudzi
they would pollute the area.
Brian Kagoro, Chairperson
of the Crisis Coalition, maintained that the incident was unfortunate,
and demonstrates the intolerance that is still rooted within Zimbabwe's
body politic.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact sheet
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