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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Vote
first, talk later
IRIN
News
January 29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76482
Zimbabwe's opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has condemned the proclamation
of a March election date by President Robert Mugabe, and is considering
boycotting the poll.
Mugabe announced
on Friday that harmonised presidential, parliamentary, senate and
council elections would be held on 29 March. But the MDC, backed
by pro-democracy civil society groups, has argued that the date
did not leave enough time to prepare for fair and meaningful polls.
Prof Welshman
Ncube, secretary-general of one of the two MDC factions negotiating
with the ruling party, said Mugabe's unilateral decision on the
date meant that dialogue with the ruling party was at an end, and
the question was whether the MDC would participate in the poll.
Southern African
Development Community (SADC) leaders had asked South African President
Thabo Mbeki to mediate a solution to Zimbabwe's eight-year political
stalemate, but the talks had stalled over the MDC's demand for political
reform to level the playing field, and insistence on a June poll
date to allow enough time for the reforms to be put in place.
"The unilateral
setting up of a date for elections by Mugabe, when we had declared
a dispute to the facilitator, President Mbeki, on the date for elections
and the issue of a transitional constitution, effectively repudiated
the dialogue," said Ncube.
With Mugabe having
pulled the rug from under the feet of the opposition, ending any
progress towards political reforms, Ncube said the two MDC factions
were now united in finding a synchronised response. "We are trying
to make sure that the National Councils of the two formations meet
during the course of this week to debate and come up with decisions
on the way forward," he told IRIN.
Tendai Biti, secretary-general
of the MDC faction led by party founder Morgan Tsvangirai, said
Mugabe was stampeding the country into the polling station. "The
only problem with this election is that it is clear so far that
an election in March will be another farce. An election in March
is likely to breed another contested outcome because the sticking
issues in the dialogue process are far from being resolved."
He said the main
sticking points in the dialogue had been the MDC's call for the
government's acceptance of transitional constitution that would
respect basic political freedoms, the right of Zimbabweans abroad
to vote, government guarantees not to use aid as a political instrument,
and the creation of an environment free from political violence.
Arnold Tsunga,
chairman of the Crisis
Coalition, an umbrella pro-democracy lobby group, told IRIN
that logistically a March ballot was unrealistic. "As things stand,
people don't know in which elections or wards they will be voting,
and that means there should be adequate voter education to ensure
that people know where they will cast their votes. The voters' roll
is in shambles and all that points to a process which will be more
of a ritual rather than an all inclusive one."
His concerns were
echoed by Rindai Chipfunde-Vava, executive director of the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), a poll-monitoring group. "The
dates for the inspection of the voters' roll has not been announced
and people do not know where they will vote, and if they are turned
away the first time they are not likely to try again at another
polling station."
"This is a harmonised
election and the implications are that there is need for more voter
education, because there will be more candidates, more polling stations
and more ballot boxes. It is a mammoth task for the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission, which will run the elections," she said.
Legal affairs
minister Patrick Chinamasa, representative of the ruling ZANU-PF
at the talks, told local media that the issue of constitutional
reform would be dealt with after the elections.
"As far as we
are concerned, the dialogue that is being facilitated by South Africa
is still ongoing. As ZANU-PF we are committed to an irreversible
process that will result in the presentation of a draft constitution
for national consultation. We would like whatever document comes
out of the national consultative process to be subjected to a referendum
and, if people accept it, only then will the country put in place
a new constitution."
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