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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
1
vote per 9 seconds - the scandal of March 29 elections
Angus
Shaw, Associated Press
March 11, 2008
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/electoral171.17880.html
Many voters
in Zimbabwe's cities — strongholds of the opposition —
may not have time to cast ballots in upcoming elections because
too few polling stations have been provided, an independent monitoring
group said Tuesday.
President Robert Mugabe,
Zimbabwe's longtime ruler, is seeking re-election amid an economic
meltdown, including rocketing inflation, shortages of most basic
goods and collapsing public services.
The independent
Zimbabwe Election
Support Network said it feared a repeat of the 2002 presidential
elections, when tens of thousands of voters were turned away across
the country after polls closed.
A list of polling stations
released by the Electoral Commission for the March 29 vote showed
"a significant discrepancy" that favored the ruling party
in its rural strongholds, the network said.
Even if voting hours
are extended, many people are likely to be turned away when polling
stations are finally closed, the group said.
No comment was immediately
available from the Electoral Commission.
The monitoring group
said Harare has 379 polling centers for about 760,000 registered
voters, leaving an average number of 2,022 voting at each station
over 12 hours. If there is maximum turnout, that gives each citizen
an average of 22 seconds to vote.
In one city district,
it came down to nine seconds if all 4,600 registered voters showed
up.
In contrast, most rural
polling stations would handle only about 600 voters each, the network
said.
"It would be unfortunate
if the problem of too few polling stations in 2002 is repeated,"
said Noel Kututwa, the group's head.
Kututwa said the number
of registered voters per polling station in the cities of Gweru
and Mutare was also more than double those registered in surrounding
rural districts
Elections in 2002 and
2005 won by Mugabe's ruling party were marred by administrative
chaos and plagued by allegations of vote rigging, irregularities
in voters' lists and charges of violence and political intimidation.
Mugabe, 84, is running
against a former ally, ex-finance minister Simba Makoni, and opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Makoni draws his support
from ruling party rebels and disillusioned supporters of Tsvangirai's
fractured Movement for Democratic Change, mostly in urban areas.
Since the government
began ordering the seizure of white-owned farms in 2000, production
of food and agricultural exports has slumped drastically. Zimbabwe
has the world's highest official rate of inflation of 100,500 percent.
Mugabe blames the crisis
on economic sanctions imposed by Britain, Zimbabwe's former colonial
power, and its Western allies to protest his land reforms and accuse
him of violating of human and democratic rights.
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