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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zim
election commission comes under fire
Agence
France-Presse (AFP)
April 07, 2008
http://zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=18544
Zimbabwe's electoral
commission (ZEC) has been accused of pro-government bias by the
opposition and of rank incompetence by the ruling party as it sits
on results of last weekend's presidential polls. The theoretically
independent body has come under fire not only from both sides of
Zimbabwe's political divide but also from abroad, with the
US querying its impartiality because President Robert Mugabe appointed
its leadership. In its pre-emptive announcement last Tuesday that
it had won both the parliamentary and presidential election, the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) made clear its lack
of faith in the commission. "We don't trust the ZEC,
which is not independent," said party secretary general Tendai
Biti before either the presidential or parliamentary results had
been announced. Even though the ZEC has since declared the MDC beat
Mugabe's Zanu PF in the parliamentary elections, the opposition
is still not convinced. "Instead of verifying, they are modifying
the results in the presidential elections," chief MDC spokesperson
Nelson Chamisa said yesterday.
The MDC, convinced
the delay in the presidential election results is a tactic to buy
Mugabe time, has launched a legal
bid to force the commission to declare the outcome. However,
as its lawyers spent the weekend in the high court, the ZEC has
also had to fend off flak from Zanu PF. The ruling party now wants
a complete recount, both of the presidential election and 16 key
parliamentary constituencies. "This the worst-run election
I have ever experienced," Zanu PF secretary for administration
Didymus Mutasa said in announcing plans to contest some of the parliamentary
results. In revealing Zanu PF's demand for a complete recount
of the presidential election, the state-run Herald said the party
was particularly concerned about the outcome in four particular
constituencies.
In a letter to the commission,
Zanu PF's lawyers wrote: "The constituency elections
officer and his team committed errors of miscounting that are so
glaring as to prejudice not just our clients' candidate but
also (in some instances) his co-contestants." Amid the accusations,
one provincial elections officer has been arrested. The ZEC replaced
the Electoral Supervisory Commission in 2006 after complaints from
the opposition that it had helped Mugabe rig previous elections.
According to the law, the ZEC's chairperson is appointed by
the president after consultation with the judicial service commission.
It consists of four other commissioners appointed by the president
from a list of seven nominees submitted by a parliamentary committee.
But Lovemore Madhuku,
a constitutional lawyer and long-time government critic, said it
would be a "fallacy" to describe the ZEC as independent.
"There is no difference between the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
and its predecessor, the Electoral Supervisory Commission. What
we had was just a name change and no fundamental change,"
he said. US State Department spokesperson Tom Casey suggested last
week that delays could be down to the "somewhat politicised
composition" of the ZEC. But with the parliamentary results
having confounded predictions that the ZEC would hand victory to
the ruling party on a plate, some commentators say such criticism
is unfair.
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