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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
Concern
over lack of voter education
Emmanuel
Mungoshi, The Standard
April 10, 2005
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/read.php?st_id=2152
VOTER apathy, piles
of spoilt ballots and an unprecedented number of voters turned away in
last month's parliamentary election are a clear indication of lack of
voter education before the polls, civic organisations have said.
The organisations said most people were turned away because they tried
to vote in the wrong constituencies, some did not have relevant identification
documents or their names did not appear on the voters' roll, while others
were not legally Zimbabwean citizens.
Former chairman of
Electoral Supervisory Commission (ESC), retired Anglican Bishop Peter
Hatendi said there was not enough voter education prior to the elections.
"Strictly speaking,
the election machinery was in gear only a month before the elections,
which is definitely not good enough. I even queried if the commission
owned the elections," said Hatendi, who resigned from the ESC citing lack
of independence.
The former ESC chairman
attributed the low voter turnout to 'credibility gap" between the voters
and contesting candidates. Apart from that most Zimbabwe has lost faith
in the country's electoral process, which is controlled by civil servants,
while other people just assumed they were still on the voters' roll, having
voted in previous elections.
"This can be attributed
to ignorance. They took it for granted that since they voted last time,
there names were still on the voters' roll, which is a sign of lack of
voter education," Hatendi said.
His comments were
supported by the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Humans Rights (ZLHR), which said
the public was not adequately informed about the delimitation of constituencies
before the polling day, which resulted in many people going to the wrong
polling stations.
"One needs to examine
the unacceptably high numbers of spoilt papers to appreciate how the inadequate
voter education has affected participation in these elections," explained
the lawyers.
The organisation recorded
60 427 spoilt papers and 133 155 voters who were turned away in 10 and
six provinces respectively in the just ended parliamentary elections.
"By the time the President
promulgated the boundaries there was inadequate opportunity for voters
to check the voters' roll and make themselves aware of which constituency
they fall in," says the human rights watchdog.
It also noted that
the late publication of the list of poling stations generated confusion
among the electorate, especially those out of towns and cities.
"The list of polling
stations was published on 18 March 2005 - 13 days before the polling day.
This is in conflict with section 51 of the Electoral Act (chapter 2:13)
which requires that information about polling stations should be provided
at least 14 days prior to the polling date," said the ZLHR.
Whilst the inspection
of the voters' roll for the March election closed on 4 February 2005,
the Zimbabwe Election Commission (ZEC), which in terms of the electoral
Act is obliged to supervise the registration and inspection process, was
only established two days before the closing date.
As a result, it said,
ZEC would not have been able to provide accurate information to voters
about the time and places of inspection.
"The failure to hold
the voter registration exercise handled by a credible impartial organ
in a transparent and accountable manner posed a significant and serious
threat to the overall credibility of the electoral process for March 2005.
"This view is supported
by the unacceptably high numbers of voters who were turned away in each
constituency on the polling day.
"Such a high turn
away would not have been experienced if the voter registration and inspection
process had been far reaching and efficient," ZLHR said.
Reginald Matchaba-Hove,
chairman of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN), said there was
need for more time to carry out sufficient voter education.
"Our voter education
programme began a month before the election, because we were under the
cloud of the NGO bill, and that time was not enough to carry out sufficient
voter education," said Matchaba-Hove.
ZEC spokesperson Utoile
Silaigwana refused to comment saying he was busy.
The ZLHR said, "The
reality is that the electorate approached elections without having benefited
from voter education. This is undesirable given the one-sided manner in
with the public media (both electronic and print) were used to support
the status quo and to vilify the opposition or perceived opponents of
the ruling party."
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