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Harare
cuts voter registration centres
Regerai
Marwezu, ZimOnline
November 02, 2007
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=2253
MASVINGO - The
government has reduced the number of voter registration centres
in the country by over 60 percent amid reports of critical shortage
of financial and human resources.
It emerged yesterday
that the second phase of the voter registration exercise was not
budgeted for, resulting in a last-minute rush to raise the required
funds.
The exercise to update
the roll ahead of next year's joint presidential and parliamentary
elections that was completed last August had to be extended last
Friday after complaints mostly from the main opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) party that thousands of newly eligible
voters from areas it controls were left out.
The Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) yesterday confirmed that not all registration centres
had been reopened for the mop-up exercise that began last Friday.
"We are
busy working flat out so that some of the traditional centres which
did not open are opened before the end of the exercise", said
ZEC spokesman Utoille Silaigwana.
The extended
voter registration exercise runs until mid-November.
Sources said urban and
rural constituencies seen as opposition strongholds were hardest
hit by the reduction of mobile registration centres.
In Masvingo province,
only 90 registration centres re-opened when the exercise was extended
compared to more than 200 centres that operated in the province's
14 constituencies during the first phase that ended in August.
Just one centre is serving Masvingo urban, home to more than 500
000 people.
"The problem is not in Masvingo alone but is countrywide where
over half of the centres are yet to open," Silaigwana told
ZimOnline.
He noted that a critical
shortage of funds had affected the electoral body's ability
to hire personnel.
Sources said officers
hired for the exercise were getting an allowance of $400 000 a day
and some teachers normally hired during such times had refused citing
poor remuneration.
Zimbabweans go to watershed polls early next year to choose a president
and members of parliament.
The MDC has already written
to ZEC demanding the convening of an all-party meeting to agree
"practical approaches" to the registration of voters
to avoid mistakes made in a previous exercise to record voters.
Zimbabwe's voters'
roll has been in shambles for years with hundreds of thousands of
names of voters who died or left the country to live abroad still
appearing on the register, while thousands more voters have failed
to vote in previous polls either because their names were entered
in wrong constituencies or did not appear at all on the register.
President Robert Mugabe's
government has been accused of rigging elections by manipulating
the voters' roll.
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