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How
Zim poll was fixed
Godwin
Gandu, Mail & Guardian (SA)
July 18,
2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=277743&area=/insight/insight__africa/
A former Zanu-PF provincial
chairperson has spilled the beans on how the ruling party rigged
the 2002 presidential election, which President Robert Mugabe won
against most expectations.
Dr Daniel Shumba is a
retired army officer, former provincial chairperson of Zanu-PF and
central committee member who was kicked out of the party last year,
together with four others after facilitating an "illegal"
meeting that sought to thwart the nomination of Vice-President Joice
Mujuru as the party's vice-president.
Now the leader of the
newly formed United People's Party (UPP), Shumba said Zanu-PF
manipulated the postal votes, which election observers are unable
to monitor properly.
Concerns about vote-rigging
are beginning to mount, as the nation gears towards the 2008 presidential
election, which could see a new political candidate from Zanu-PF.
Civic groups are pushing for a coalition to unseat Zanu-PF, which
has been in power for the past 26 years.
Mugabe has repeatedly
dismissed concerns about the 2002 electoral fraud, saying the Movement
for Democratic Change were "cry babies".
This week more
than 200 members of the reform-seeking National
Constitutional Assembly were arrested across the country for
their involvement in protests to demand constitutional change. By
Thursday they had not been released.
In a detailed reaction
to Mail & Guardian inquiries on how elections have been rigged
in the past, Shumba said the weakness is that "nobody has
ever been able to account, monitor and verify the figures of postal
votes".
Mugabe's apparatus
has been able to "exploit [this] at every turn", he
said. "There has never been a supplementary voters'
list showing the people who cast postal voters in Zimbabwe."
"That's
correct. We have never had access to postal votes," says Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) chairperson Dr Reginald Matchave-Hove.
"The possibility of rigging is very very high," he added.
"Accessing [postal votes] has been a mountain to climb and
nobody has the full picture."
The ZESN says it has
evidence of rigging from the last parliamentary elections, in which
the figures originally announced by the government--sponsored Zimbabwe
Elections Commission do not tally.
In the 2002 presidential
election the government's strategy was to frustrate the urban
electorate by reducing the number of polling stations. This created
queues, which frustrated many people who eventually did not vote.
An application to extend the -voting days by two was accepted by
the high court.
But, according to Shumba's
UPP, the area of postal votes needs to be closely examined. Manipulation
would be used again "because it has worked before".
Thousands of ballots
are marked in favour of the Zanu-PF candidate, Mugabe, from a central
point, usually an army base, and then posted so that they can be
counted as postal votes from residents who are physically way from
an area in which they normally reside. They were commonly sent to
areas where Zanu-PF is expected to win a large majority so that
the disproportionately big margins do not raise eyebrows.
A former operative within
the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), who did not want to
be identified, told the M&G he was privy to the postal vote-rigging
strategy.
The insider said the
decision to rig the 2002 election was made at a joint operations
group (JOG) meeting, prior to the army issuing a controversial statement
saying it wouldn't salute anyone who had not participated
in the struggle. "Mugabe was only told [at the JOG meeting]
they were working something out to make sure the sell-outs never
won. He agreed but never understood the mechanics involved,"
the insider said.
The JOG comprises the
army, police, prisons authorities, home affairs officials and the
CIO, chaired by Mugabe.
To boost votes in the
presidential election, postal votes were used in strategic provinces
including Mashonaland Central, West and Manicaland.
Despite the vote-rigging,
the UPP will participate in all future elections.
Shumba insisted the rigging
would not prevent Zanu-PF from being rejected in the next election.
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