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Mugabe
could benefit from diaspora vote
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Joseph Sithole (AR No. 129, 30-Aug-07)
August 30, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338225&apc_state=henfacr338223
Zimbabwean ruling party
ZANU-PF may benefit if it gives into opposition demands to allow
the country's sizeable diaspora to vote in next year's
elections, warn analysts.
The right for all Zimbabweans
in the diaspora to vote in next year's joint parliamentary
and presidential elections is among key demands put forward by Zimbabwe's
opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, in ongoing talks
with ZANU-PF.
The government has so
far opposed extending the vote to an estimated 3.5 million Zimbabweans
living abroad, arguing that it would give the MDC an unfair advantage
as ZANU-PF senior officials cannot campaign in Europe or the United
States following travel restrictions imposed on them in 2002 after
a disputed election.
But analysts warn it
could be to the authorities' advantage to give ex-pats the
vote, as the difficulties of verifying the identity of Zimbabweans
scattered around the world would create the potential for vote-rigging.
The Zimbabean diaspora
includes people of all social classes and political persuasions
who have fled the country in the past seven years of political and
economic turmoil which has come about as a result of President Robert
Mugabe's ruinous policies.
Millions of Zimbabweans
in neighbouring South Africa have now formed lobby groups under
the banner of the MDC, demanding the right to vote in the crucial
parliamentary and presidential 2008 elections.
But few are prepared
to return into the country before they know the outcome of the ballot,
which is widely expected to be won by the ruling party using whatever
means are at its disposal.
Mugabe, who has put himself
forward as the sole candidate for ZANU-PF in the elections, is still
to be endorsed by the party, but different groups such as the Women's
and Youth Leagues have already vowed to support his candidacy.
The MDC say that most
Zimbabweans who have left the country in recent years have fled
Mugabe's repressive policies and the precipitous economic
collapse.
This, it argues, would
make them predisposed to vote for Mugabe's opponent.
"They are angry
with Mugabe whose incompetent and illegitimate government has ruined
their lives," said an MDC official in the capital of Harare.
"Mugabe is afraid
that once such people are allowed to vote, he has no chance of staying
a day longer in power. He will therefore resist this demand with
his life."
But analysts caution
that MDC's demand may hand ZANU-PF victory on a silver platter.
In the past, ZANU-PF
has been criticised for allowing military personnel on international
duty and embassy staff around the globe to vote - in a process which
the opposition said lacked transparency.
Without any means of
immediately verifying the residential addresses and authenticating
the names of ordinary Zimbabweans registering and voting from different
locations across the globe, analysts say extending the vote to the
diaspora could be manna for the ruling party's rigging machine.
"The real irony
is that it is in fact ZANU-PF and the government who are resisting
pressure to allow people in the diaspora to vote," said a
political analyst at the University of Zimbabwe.
"But very soon,
they may discover it might, in fact, be to its advantage."
The analyst explained
that so-called ghost voters are normally eliminated by voting requirements,
such as national IDs, proof of residence and citizenship.
"But if the MDC's
claims of vote-rigging by ZANU-PF over the years are to be taken
seriously, it means even this rigorous screening process is not
foolproof. What then would stop them taking advantage of voters
whose addresses we don't know?" he asked.
"The MDC would
have to act with great circumspection in trying to leverage the
diaspora vote. They may live to regret ever raising the point in
the first place."
Another Harare-based
analyst said there was a danger that ZANU-PF "might make a
show of resisting this plum offer and then strike when the enemy
least expects.
"They can decide
at the last minute to 'make a huge concession' for Zimbabweans
in the diaspora to vote after they have played with the numbers
- and the MDC will be the biggest loser."
The analyst said a low
turnout in the recently ended nationwide voter registration exercise
may prompt the government to exploit the situation in order to gain
more votes.
The registration process
ended on August 17. Only an estimated 80,000 people, or about four
average urban constituencies, were added to the voters' roll,
bringing the total number of registered voters countrywide to about
5.5 million.
There are also concerns
that voter numbers will be low as a significant number of those
on the voters' roll have since left the country for various
reasons, including further education and better employment opportunities.
"There is a longstanding
dispute over legitimacy which has caused Zimbabwe's isolation
from the international community. That in part is also responsible
for the country's relentless economic slide," said the
analyst.
"If the diaspora
vote can be counted on to boost numbers and give the [election]
winner the appearance of legitimacy, ZANU-PF will grab the chance.
In fact, ZANU-PF appears more adept at changing and adapting to
changing circumstances than the MDC."
Joseph Sithole is the
pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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