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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
President
Robert Mugabe 'raises the dead' to secure electoral victory in Zimbabwe
Jan Raath,
The Times (UK)
March 18, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3571706.ece
Zimbabwe has the highest
proportion of elderly voters in the world, according to the voters'
roll being used for elections next week. A glance at one page of
the roll yesterday for a ward in the Mount Pleasant suburb of Harare
turned up a Fodias Kunyepa, who was born in 1901. Over the page
was Rebecca Armstrong, born 1900. Somewhat younger was Desmond Lardner-Burke,
born 1909, who was the notorious Minister for Justice in the rebel
Rhodesian Government and responsible for the harassment, arrest
and detention without trial of tens of thousands of black nationalists,
including President Mugabe, fighting against white rule in the 1960s
and 1970s. Mr Lardner-Burke left the country soon after the demise
of the illegally constituted Rhodesian state in 1980, and the establishment
of Zimbabwe's independence. He died soon after, in South Africa.
Mr Kunyepa and Mrs Armstrong are also long dead. Opposition campaign
workers say that the voters' roll is stuffed with the names of the
dead, of non-existent people, of those with fake identity numbers
and with names repeated numerous times in different constituencies,
sometimes in the same ward. That way, supporters of Mr Mugabe and
his ruling Zanu PF party will be allowed by compliant electoral
officials to vote repeatedly. "It also means that when they
stuff the ballot boxes, a huge majority will not appear unreasonable,"
said one campaigner who asked not to be named.
Mr Lardner-Burke, who
was reputed to have a sense of irony, would be amused at the idea
of posthumously helping Mr Mugabe, born in 1924, to win presidential
elections and go on for another five years. "There's one [person
at least 100 years old] on nearly every page of the voters' roll
for Mount Pleasant," said Trudy Stevenson, parliamentary candidate
for one of the two factions of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC). The roll has 212 pages with 55 names on each. Before
the last elections, in 2005, the MDC was able to get hold of CDs
of the voters' rolls for 12 constituencies, subjected them to digital
analysis and found that 45 per cent of the names on the list were
false. Since then Tobaiwa Mudede, the Registrar-General, has kept
a tight lid on the roll. Mrs Stevenson has been fighting to get
a digital list of the roll, which takes up five CDs. Under court
orders, Mr Mudede complied. He gave her 50 CDs of the roll - but
as photographs that cannot be digitally analysed.
Zimbabwe's electoral
law also states that the winner of the presidential election
has to have more than 50 per cent of the vote. The provision took
on dramatic importance when Simba Makoni, Mr Mugabe's former Finance
Minister, joined Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition leader, last
month in challenging Mr Mugabe. Analysts say that in the event that
Mr Mugabe wins less than 50 per cent - and he got only 54 per cent
in the last presidential election in 2002 - an alliance between
the two opposition candidates would almost certainly beat him. However,
the Act also states that the one who gets a simple majority is to
be declared the winner. "If it turns out he doesn't get over
50 per cent, there's no guessing which alternative he will choose,"
one lawyer said.
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