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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Update
on Presidential run-off election - Bill Watch 19/2008
Veritas
May 10, 2008
General Notice
71/2008 - notifies the results of the presidential election
and the need for a run-off election, as already announced by the
Chief Elections Officer on 2nd May.
Participation
in run-off
President
Mugabe's [ZANU PF] candidature was confirmed soon after the
results were declared on 2nd May.
Morgan Tsvangirayi
[MDC-T] has announced today that he will participate, but has set
conditions which have to be met including that the run-off should
be by 23rd May. [see note at end of Bulletin for other conditions].
Run-Off
Date - Extension of 21-day deadline?
ZEC
has not announced the run-off polling date. Section 110(3) of the
Electoral
Act states that the run-off election must be held within 21
days "after the election". There is a difference of
legal opinion whether this means 21 days after polling [29th March]
or 21 days after declaration of results [2nd May]. ZEC has taken
it to be the latter, which would give a deadline of Friday 23rd
May. But . . . ..
ZEC has the
power to extend the 21-day period in terms of section 192(4) and
(5) of the Electoral Act. These provisions empower ZEC to make "such
statutory instruments as it considers necessary or desirable to
ensure that an election is properly and efficiently conducted and
to deal with any matter or situation connected with, arising out
of or resulting from the election . . . . . . [including] altering
any period specified in this Act within which anything connected
with, arising out of or resulting from any election must be done".
Any such statutory instrument must be approved by the Minister of
Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs and be gazetted.
Section 192
does not in as many words set any limits to ZEC's power to
extend the 21-day period, but on general principle ZEC should use
its power reasonably.
Effect
of withdrawal of candidate
Section
107 of the Electoral Act permits withdrawal of a candidate up to
21 days before polling day. The consequence of withdrawal is the
declaration of the remaining candidate as unopposed winner of the
election [section 49 of the Electoral Act as read with section 112].
Effect
of death of candidate
Where a candidate dies before polling day, the election
is called off and the Presidential electoral process has to be gone
through again, commencing with a new nomination court for nomination
of candidates. Where a candidate dies after voting has begun, the
election continues and if the surviving candidate receives the majority
of the votes cast, he will be declared duly elected as President;
if, however, the deceased candidate receives most votes, the election
must be re-run, commencing with new nominations. [Electoral Act,
section 108]. Where a successful candidate dies after being sworn
in as President, the resulting vacancy must be filled by the members
of the Senate and the House of Assembly sitting as an electoral
college. [Constitution,
section 28(3)(b)]
Voting
in run-off election
Voters
rolls for run-off election
The run-off
election is an extension/continuation of the election of the 29th
March. This rules out voting by any voter registered after the 14th
February, when the rolls were closed for the purposes of the election.
As for a fresh
inspection of voters rolls, there is nothing in the law to require
ZEC to repeat its former special arrangements for inspection of
voters rolls. Any voters roll may, however, be inspected at the
ZEC office and/or constituency registrar's office where it is kept
[section 21 of Electoral Act as amended by Electoral Laws Amendment
Act].
Ward-based voting procedure
The
Chief Elections Officer has confirmed that the procedure for voting
in the run-off election will be the same as for the election on
29th March. That is in line with section 110(3) of the Electoral
Act, which requires the run-off election to be held "in accordance
with this Act". It follows that, as in the election of the
29th March, only registered voters will be able to vote and they
will have to vote in the ward in which they are registered. Votes
will be counted at polling stations immediately after the closing
of the poll and results of polling station counts will be posted
outside polling stations for public information [using form V.11].
Polling station results will be collated at constituency level on
form V.23 for onward transmission to the Chief Elections Officer
at the ZEC National Collation Centre.
Update
on House of Assembly, Senate and Council Elections
House
of Assembly By-Elections
There has been
no announcement of dates for by-elections to fill the vacancies
in the three House of Assembly seats [Pelandaba-Mpopoma, Gwanda
South and Redcliff] which were not voted for in the 29th March election
following the deaths of candidates. The by-elections will be called
by Presidential proclamation published in the Government Gazette.
Publication
of council election results
The
Chief Elections Officer has published results in the press for Bulawayo
[Bulawayo City Council]; Harare [Harare City Council, Chitungwiza
Town Council, Epworth Local Board]; Manicaland [Mutare City Council,
Chipinge and Rusape Town Councils, Buhera, Chimanimani, Chipinge,
Makoni, Mutare, Mutasa and Nyanga Rural District Councils]; and
Mashonaland Central [Bindura Municipal Council, Bindura, Chaminuka,
Guruve, Mazowe, Mbire, Muzarabani, Pfura and Rushinga Rural District
Councils]. ZEC has said that the results for councils in the remaining
provinces will be published shortly.
Election
petitions
The
outcome of these petitions could drastically alter the proportion
of seats and accordingly the balance of power between the two main
parties, in particular in the House of Assembly. At present the
figures are:
House of Assembly:
combined MDC 109; Zanu PF 97; Independent 1; seats waiting by-elections
3 [total 210].
Senate: combined
MDC 30; ZANU PF 30; Chiefs 18; and the 10 seats for Provincial Governors
and 5 other seats to be appointed by the new President [total 93].
The latest figure
for election petitions lodged with the Electoral Court is 105 [53
by ZANU-PF candidates, 52 by MDC candidates]. Seats in both Houses
of Parliament are involved - the majority in the House of Assembly
and a few in the Senate. We will supply further details about the
petitions as soon as they become available.
All 22 High
Court judges have now been appointed as judges of the Electoral
Court in view of the large number of petitions lodged.
Section 182
of the Electoral Act states that an election petition must be decided
by the Electoral Court within 6 months from the date it is lodged.
All petitions had to be lodged within 14 days of declaration of
results [either original or recount results]. So judgments on the
petitions will have to be handed down at the latest during October
and early November, depending on when individual petitions were
lodged.
On Friday 9th
May Judge President Rita Makarau and Judges Guvava and Uchena met
lawyers representing all petitioners to discuss procedural matters.
The Judge President stressed that the 6-month deadline would be
observed. Normal court procedures would have to be modified to ensure
completion of all cases within the 6-month period.
A Practice
Direction setting out the special procedures is expected to be issued
shortly. [We will offer it as soon as it becomes available.]
Appeals
from electoral court decisions
A
judgment of the Electoral Court is final on matters of fact but
an appeal on questions of law can be taken to the Supreme Court.
Appeals must decided within six months after being lodged.
Escalation
of post-election violence
Much
of this seems to be based on reprisals for voting patterns. The
environment of fear resulting from the violence will effect voting
in the run-off. The head of a South African contingent of regional
election observers, Kingsley Mamabolo, said last Wednesday. "A
presidential election run-off in Zimbabwe cannot take place given
the current levels of violence . . . .We have seen it, there are
people in hospital who said they have been tortured, you have seen
pictures, you have seen pictures of houses that have been destroyed
and so on." Pretoria - News24.
Also of major
concern for a run-off election is the displacement of persons taking
place, not only of those being displaced for political affiliations
but also the numbers of farm workers being displaced. There are
no facilities at the moment for internally displaced persons to
vote.
MDC
conditions for run-off:
- Run-off to
take place within two weeks, not later than 23rd May
- Cessation
of violence
- Unfettered
access for international observers
- SADC peacekeeping
force on the ground
- Re-constitution
of ZEC,
- Free press
- local and international
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