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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Thousands
rush to check voters' roll as deadline looms
Tichaona Sibanda, SW Radio Africa
February 12, 2008
http://www.swradioafrica.com/news120208/votersrole120208.htm
Thousands of people countrywide
are rushing to meet Thursday's deadline to register to vote
in next month's general election, amid reports that many registered
voters have had their names deleted from the voters' roll.
A snap survey carried
out by our Harare correspondent Simon Muchemwa in Kuwadzana constituency
in the capital on Tuesday, revealed that five out of ten people
who checked the voters' roll found out that their names had
been deleted after registering to vote last year.
'By coincidence
some of the people who had their names missing had foreign surnames
but were born in Zimbabwe and are Zimbabwean citizens. These people
all voted in 2005 and they were shocked not to see their names on
the voters' roll. Others had Zimbabwean names but still could
not find their names,' Muchemwa said.
The government's
Election Commission reported in December that over five million
people had registered to vote in the March elections, but the opposition
parties insist the voters roll is in a shambles. Muchemwa said the
independent Zimbabwe
Election Support Network has also reported that it has received
numerous complaints from individuals whose names do not appear on
the voters' roll.
'The voters'
roll is widely believed to be in shambles. A detailed analysis of
only 3 constituencies' voters' rolls used in the presidential
election in March 2002 indicated that as many as 2 million voters
out of 5 million on the roll were either dead, not known at a registered
address, or had duplicate entries,' said Muchemwa.
He added that a check
he did on the Kuwadzana voters' roll revealed as many as 15
people residing in a single house. This is a system generally used
by Zanu-PF to rig elections. It is very rare for a family in the
country to have 15 adults of voting age to be living under the same
roof.
'This
is how Zanu-PF rigs the election. Because of stringent rules that
they've introduced, such as producing identity cards, a letter
from a land lord if you don't own a house, it is easy to register
a bunch of people under the same roof as long as you belong to Zanu-PF
structures in the area,' Muchemwa said.
Constitutional
Amendment No. 18 signed into law last year, created an additional
60 constituencies and brought the total representatives in the House
of Assembly up to 210, from 150. The Zimbabwe Election Commission
claims that 5,612,464 are registered to vote. They divide this by
210 constituencies saying that this gives an average figure of 26,726
voters per constituency.
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