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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Go
home and vote, NGOs urge expats
IRIN News
March
11 , 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77233
Johannesburg
- As Zimbabweans prepare for national elections on 29 March, civil
society organisations have started a campaign to ensure that those
in the diaspora go home to vote.
"Power
to the People - We demand: one citizen, one vote, independently-run
elections and an end to political violence", says a billboard
outside Park Station, a transport hub in downtown Johannesburg,
South Africa, placed by Zimbabwe Democracy Now, an activist non-governmental
organisation (NGO). The billboard is one of several that have sprung
up in South Africa, including on the border with neighbouring Zimbabwe.
A 'Rock
The Vote' concert, a few metres from the billboard in Park Station,
urges Zimbabweans to go home as part of the "Get out and vote"
campaign, a group initiative by NGOs like the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), the National
Constitutional Assembly, the Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum, and Crisis
in Zimbabwe.
It is estimated more
than two million Zimbabweans are living in South Africa. "We
are saying that those who can go home should go and vote; those
that cannot go should pick up the phone and urge their relatives
not to forget to go and vote," said Mathula Lusinga, in charge
of the NGOs' voter education campaign. The campaign began on 4 February
and runs till the end of March.
However, Nonhlahla Sibanda,
a Zimbabwean in Johannesburg, told IRIN she would not go home to
vote because "I am here illegally and if I cross the border
and go home I might not be able to come back."
Sibanda is one of thousands
of Zimbabweans who have risked life and limb to cross the border
in search of a better life in South Africa. Many are deported. According
to the International Organisation of Migration (IOM), they assisted
126,000 Zimbabweans at their reception centre in the Zimbabwean
border town of Beitbridge in 2007 alone.
The Zimbabwean government
does not allow its expatriate population to vote. Simon Khaya Moyo,
Zimbabwe's ambassador to South Africa, recently said there was currently
no legal provision for an external or online ballot.
"That is why I sometimes
find it rather misinformed or simply mischievous that there are
groups, usually comprising youths picketing the [Zimbabwean] embassy,
demanding external ballot ... I have always stressed the point that
those people, if genuine, should go back home and participate in
the electoral processes."
Lusinga, of the NGOs'
voter campaign, said, "Some of them [expatriates] would like
to go, but they tell us they have no money to go home."
Tendai Mutasa, a Zimbabwean
at the 'Rock the Vote' concert, who intends to go Zimbabwe to cast
his ballot, remarked: "We want to go home, we are struggling
here. I am prepared to go and stay home if I can get a job and take
care of my family."
Zimbabweans at the concert
told IRIN that every time they called home they where told how expensive
it was to live in Zimbabwe. "The money that we are sending
home is no longer able to take care of our families. We just hear
the exchange rate has gone up, but you can't buy anything with the
millions of Zimbabwean dollars."
Although GDP per capita
has been falling for over 10 years, it remains well above the the
median for low-income sub-Saharan African countries. But an inflation
rate running at over 100,000 percent in a country once touted as
a beacon of development has pushed households to the brink.
An IOM study in 2004
found that nearly all Zimbabwean expatriates living in the United
Kingdom and South Africa maintained regular contact with family
members back home, and about three-quarters of those interviewed
said they sent remittances. Two-thirds also sent non-monetary gifts,
most often clothing (85 percent) followed by food (43 percent).
Two-thirds of the respondents
in the IOM study said they would like to return to Zimbabwe and
live there at some point in the future, and 21 percent said they
might like to; only 12 percent definitely did not want to return.
This month's election
pits President Robert Mugabe, 84, who helped bring the country to
independence and has led Zimbabwe since 1980, against two other
contenders. The outcome of the ballot is widely regarded as key
to Zimbabwe's stability and development.
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