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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
Election Watch Issue No. 16
Sokwanele
January 28, 2008
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/zew_issue16_290108.html
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Bone-weary Zimbabweans
dragged themselves into the new year after a Christmas season memorable
for the chaotic monetary situation, dearth of food, grinding poverty
and endless queues.
In a weekly open letter
from a small Zimbabwean town, the writer comments: "It is hard
to believe that Zimbabwe will be ready for an election in just 56
days time. The logistics of an election are enormous under normal
circumstances, but mammoth in a country which has all but collapsed".
Every aspect of an election, from the campaigning to the advertising,
voting, monitoring and counting is swamped with problems..."
In his new year message,
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader Morgan Tsvangirai reminds
Zimbabweans that the situation requires a great deal of courage,
endurance and resilience. With respect to the forthcoming elections
(presidential and legislative), he says a lot of work is still pending
to repair the voters' roll and the historically disputed electoral
management system before any legitimate election, with a legitimate
result, can take place.
He notes that, contrary
to the letter and spirit of the current Pretoria negotiations, the
Zanu PF regime has deployed the military, Tobaiwa Mudede (the Registrar
General) and the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) to mark
constituency boundaries and register voters. Tsvangirai reiterates
it will be impossible to hold an election in March.
MDC MP David Coltart
(AM) expresses a similar view in his January newsletter: "The
concern of many is that if elections are held too soon, Zanu PF
will be able to claim legitimacy through a process which has a democratic
facade but which in reality does not allow for a genuinely free
expression of the informed will of the electorate... We in the MDC
say that there must be a new democratic constitution in place and
sufficient time for its provisions to be implemented before an election
is held. Zanu PF appears to be determined to push ahead with a March
election without any opportunity for (the newly negotiated) laws
to have any meaningful effect on the electoral environment..."
Even provincial chairpersons
of Zanu PF have reportedly told the leadership that the present
schedule leaves little time to choose candidates and organise campaigns.
The Zimbabwe Diaspora
Forum, a pro-human rights group, is adamant that no election can
ever be free or fair if the estimated five million Zimbabweans who
have been forced to leave the country for political or economic
reasons are denied their right to vote. Contrary to international
electoral regulations, the Zimbabwean government does not allow
citizens based outside the country to vote.
In this issue we report
that the Zimbabwean government will prohibit foreign observers deemed
to be biased from overseeing the elections.
Independent local and
regional election observers have expressed concern about the lack
of transparency in the delimitation of new constituencies and the
MDC says it will not recognise the exercise because it is seriously
flawed.
The Electoral Institute
of Southern Africa says the Zimbabwean Electoral Commission has
no mandate to determine that elections must be held in March, as
talks between the ruling party and opposition have yet to be concluded
in Pretoria.
Lawyers representing
the publishers of The Daily News and The Daily News on Sunday say
the Media and Information Commission has yet provide them with a
date on which the newspaper's application to resume operations will
be held.
Intimidation and harassment
of non-governmental organisation workers by Zanu PF youth militia
and traditional leaders in rural areas is increasing.
Traditional chiefs in
most parts of the Midlands province are being forced to take charge
of Zanu PF cell branches in an attempt to coerce villagers in rural
areas to vote for the ruling party.
Impoverished farmers
are having to show they are loyal members of Zanu PF if they want
free equipment being handed out by the government.
The recent government
decision to abolish the executive mayor's office is yet another
political strategy aimed at undermining the MDC's influence in urban
areas, the party's holders of the posts have said.
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