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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
election chaos deepens
Peta Thornycroft, Voice of America (VOA) News
February 06, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-02-06-voa45.cfm
The Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) says President Robert Mugabe
violated the constitution
in January by proclaiming elections and not allowing legislators
to inspect or debate the new boundaries.
The group says the constitution
calls for legislators to approve or seek to change boundaries and
to see that voter populations have been allocated fairly.
The government has doubled
the number of voting districts for the March 29 elections. Zimbabweans
will for the first time vote in presidential, parliamentary, senate
and local government elections on the same day.
But there is still no
map or even a description of the voting areas for the local government
elections and neither candidates nor voters know where they will
be able to cast their vote.
The Zimbabwe Elections
Support Network says election authorities have made, what they describe
as "a mockery" of new election laws that went into force
in January.
The group also says the
government ran out of voter registration materials and has failed
to adequately let people know where and when they could register.
In apparent acknowledgment of election-preparation problems, the
government has delayed the candidate filing deadline by more than
a week, until February 15.
Analysts say the election
preparations are chaotic because President Mugabe was determined
to hold the polls in March and there was not enough time to introduce
so many new laws and voting districts.
South African negotiators
who facilitated eight months of negotiations between the ruling
ZANU-PF and the opposition MDC failed to persuade President Mugabe
to delay the elections until the new laws could be fully enforced.
The Zimbabwe Elections
Support Network says new electoral laws are being regularly broken.
One of them is a new media law that demands all contesting candidates
and parties be given equal treatment by state owned media.
The Media
Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ) which closely monitors
domestic media says in its weekly reports that the only daily newspapers,
and the only radio and television stations in the country break
the law every day.
Opposition parties say
high candidate filing fees are hurting the opposition. The 210 parliamentary
candidates from each party, need two billion Zimbabwe dollars each.
Opposition election organizers
say ruling ZANU-PF candidates have access to government cash, but
people in Zimbabwe are only allowed to draw 500 million Zimbabwean
dollars a day from their bank accounts.
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