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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
voters face a puzzle of election candidates
Monsters and Critics
February 24, 2008
View story on
Monsters and Critics website
Johannesburg/Harare -
Voters in Zimbabwe's elections due in five weeks will have to puzzle
through a blur of alliances, divisions and sub-divisions among the
political parties before they can decide who is really the parliamentary
candidate they want to vote for.
The Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission, the official election administrator, published Sunday
a list of 779 candidates for the 210 seats in the lower house of
assembly, and 197 aspirants for the 60 elected seats in the upper
house, the senate, from 12 political parties and 116 independents.
The choice is narrowed
by the fact that three of those parties have clear national support.
The clarity ends there.
Thereafter, voters are
faced with numerous candidates claiming to represent the same party,
others purporting to represent the genuine faction of one of the
mainstream parties but in fact using the name and symbol of a different
faction, and independent candidates who are not really independent
but allied to factions of other parties.
'It's going to be very
confusing to a lot of voters,' admitted David Coltart, senate candidate
for the smaller faction of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change.
The muddle of candidates
adds to widespread concern over the elections on March 29, where,
for the first time, the electorate of 5.5 million people will have
to mark their Xs on four different ballot papers for presidential,
house of assembly, senate and local government wards.
Church and civic groups
point out that the head of ZEC, judge George Chiweshe, has been
illegally appointed by Mugabe; that he ignored legal procedures
for the setting of the election date; that the boundaries of the
constituencies in the elections were illegally promulgated; and
that there is evidence of comprehensive manipulation of the voters
roll.
They say that ZEC has
carried out almost no voter education on the complicated new system,
the campaign period is far too short and there is scant hope of
all would-be voters being able to cast their vote in a single day.
President Robert Mugabe,
who turned 84 at the weekend and has been in power since independence
in 1980, is standing for re-election with a record in the last eight
years of bringing the country's economy to its knees.
Also standing
for the presidency are former national labour leader Morgan Tsvangirai,
head of the larger faction of the Movement for Democratic Change
who since 2000 has been beaten by Mugabe in the last three elections
- all dismissed by independent observers as fraudulent - and former
ruling party politburo member Simba Makoni, the surprise candidate
denounced
by Mugabe as a prostitute.
Makoni describes himself
as an independent without a political party, but has asked disgruntled
members of Mugabe's ruling ZANU(PF) party to back him by registering
themselves in the parliamentary elections, also as independents.
In eight of the constituencies
for the two chambers of parliament, the ruling party appears to
have registered two candidates under its name.
However, in all cases,
one of the two is an angry would-be candidate fighting against the
official ZANU(PF) candidate imposed by the party hierarchy after
its primary elections that were riddled with bribery and cheating.
The development is unprecedented
in the party's history, and observers say it indicates the deep
divisions over corruption and the state of the economy that threaten
to destroy the organization.
Tsvangirais faction of
the MDC, formally registered as MDC- Tsvangirai, also has double
candidacies facing each other in 11 constituencies, the result of
two new separate sub-factions that developed since the popular original
party sundered in 2005.
Other discontented MDC-Tsvangirai
candidates have had themselves listed just as MDC, to distinguish
themselves from the former labour boss faction.
Unfortunately, this is
also how the other faction of the original MDC has been registered,
and there are 16 constituencies where candidates representing different
groups will appear on the ballot paper to be representing the same
party.
'We have a problem,'
said Coltart.
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