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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Southern
African regional group solicits Zimbabwe election observers
Carole Gombakomba and Sithandekile Mhlanga, Voice of
America (VOA) News
February 20, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2008-02-20-voa39.cfm
The Southern African
Development Community has invited its member states to send observers
to take part in the March 29 elections in Zimbabwe in which President
Robert Mugabe will seek re-election against two principal rivals.
An official of the Southern
African Development Community said the organization hopes to deploy
a large delegation to Zimbabwe. But the official said that the mission
might be deployed later than had been hoped due to some logistical
challenges.
SADC was instrumental
in launching crisis resolution
talks between Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party and the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change last March - though after about 11
months of negotiations under South African mediation the negotiations
deadlocked over the election date and constitutional reform.
The SADC Parliamentary
Forum, meanwhile, said it is still waiting for an invitation from
the Zimbabwean government to observe the elections.
Zimbabwe
Election Support Network Chairman Noel Kututwa said his group
is also encouraged by the SADC move - but cautioned that if
the SADC observer team is not in place in good time - as happened
in 2005 - it may not be able to monitor balloting properly and credibly
report on whether the elections are free and fair.
Kututwa added that the
Zimbabwean government may not be keen to see the SADC Parliamentary
Forum in place as a corps of observers because its "independent"
reports reflected the "true nature of previous elections"
in the country.
Britain, meanwhile, called
for Zimbabwe to admit international monitors ahead of the March
elections, saying conditions for the poll are far from being free
and fair.
Taking questions in the
House of Commons on the upcoming Zimbabwean elections, Foreign Secretary
David Miliband said he is urging states in the region to insist
that Harare meet international standards for democratic elections,
including those promulgated by the Southern African Development
Community.
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