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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Church
commission urges Zimbabwe to postpone March elections
Bronwen
Dachs, Catholic News Service (CNS)
February 11, 2008
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0800812.htm
Cape Town -
Zimbabwe's Catholic
justice and peace commission has called for the postponement
of March 29 presidential and parliamentary elections.
The commission said it
noted impediments to free and fair elections "with grave concern."
"The voter registration
process and requirements are cumbersome, thereby limiting full participation
of all citizens" and "in some areas voter registration
was not adequately done," the commission said in a Feb. 9 statement
from the capital, Harare.
"There has been
inadequate preparation and voter education on the electoral process,"
it said, noting that "confusion continues" because presidential
and parliamentary elections will be held together for the first
time.
Millions of Zimbabweans
who have fled to neighboring countries and overseas to escape their
country's economic meltdown should be allowed to vote because they
still contribute significantly to Zimbabwe, the commission said.
Also, laws that prohibit opposition campaigning and access to information
"continue to be an obstacle to the freedoms required for the
preparation and conduct of a free and fair election," it said.
"Ethical responsibility
on the part of the public media demands that political parties and
candidates be accorded adequate and equal" access to its resources,
the commission said.
It urged government
authorities to adhere to the Southern
African Development Community's Principles and Guidelines Governing
the Holding of Democratic Elections "in letter and in spirit."
"We would like to
remind the relevant authorities and citizens that elections are
a process and not a once-off event," it said. With elections
scheduled for March "there is not enough time for various political
parties to roll out their campaign programs."
The justice and peace
commission said that, seven weeks before the elections, citizens
still did not have information such as which candidates would be
running and which parties would field candidates.
"We strongly recommend
that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission be dissolved with immediate
effect and a new one be appointed in terms of the new law,"
it said, noting that the current body is illegal in terms of an
amendment to the electoral act.
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