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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
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Mounting
violence does not speed up deployment of election monitors
IRIN News
May 29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78475
No independent
African electoral observers have been invited to monitor Zimbabwe's
presidential run-off election on 27 June, and the bodies approved
by President Robert Mugabe's government are not yet at full strength,
Dieudonne Tshiyoyo, a programme officer at the South Africa-based
Electoral Institute of Southern Africa (EISA), told IRIN.
Mugabe, the incumbent
and leader of the ZANU-PF party, will compete against Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), amid
a wave of post-election violence since the ZANU-PF government lost
control of parliament for the first time since independence from
Britain in 1980.
There is general agreement
that people have been killed since the 29 March poll, but "It
is hard to get a very precise picture of the full range of the violence,
or the exact number of politically motivated extra-judicial killings,"
the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, said on
28 May.
"At one level, there
appears to be an increasing pattern of people being targeted for
politically motivated assassination; at another, arrests, harassment,
intimidation and violence - directed not just at people with
political affiliations, but also at members of civil society -
are continuing on a daily basis."
Simba Makoni,
who competed
in the first round of the presidential election, has reportedly
called for the run-off poll to be abandoned.
"The country does not need another election at this time ...
Besides, the violence now gripping the country bodes ill for a free
and fair election."
The African Union (AU),
the Pan African Parliament (PAP) and the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) have all said they would increase the numbers of
their observers for the run-off ballot.
Tshiyoyo said the SADC
was expected to deploy 200 observers, 80 more than for the 29 March
poll; the AU was expected to "beef up" its 30 monitors;
PAP was expected to deploy 50 parliamentarians.
Neither the SADC, nor
the AU or the PAP could be reached for comment. Tshiyoyo, whose
organisation monitored the 29 March poll - although their accreditation
was not processed in time - said "it would be ideal to have
all observers on the ground right now."
He said the PAP observers
were scheduled to be deployed on 4 June, and although a "very
small" number of SADC observers had remained in the country,
there had been no statements or reports from them, "so it is
difficult to establish what they are doing".
"Since
the first round of the presidential election ... police have harassed
the legitimate, peaceful activities of staff and observers of the
Zimbabwe Election
Support Network (ZESN), a legally established and widely respected
citizen rights group that conducted observation in compliance with
the country's electoral laws, code of conduct, and international
principles for election observation," the organisation said
in a statement on 23 May.
"ZESN members have
been arbitrarily detained and interrogated by police and their offices
have been searched."
Mugabe, 84, has ruled
Zimbabwe for 28 years. He launched his re-election bid on Africa
Day, 25 May, with the theme, "100 Percent Empowerment, Total
Independence".
Election
campaign
His
address, broadcast live on national television and radio, did not
propose solutions on how to tackle unemployment, now at more than
80 percent, an inflation rate unofficially estimated at one million
percent, or the widespread shortages of food, electricity, fuel
and medicines, and a collapsing mining, agriculture and manufacturing
sector.
Mugabe singled
out US representatives in his speech: "Tall as he is, [US
ambassador to Zimbabwe James McGee] if he continues doing that [documenting
the alleged torture of MDC activists] I will kick him out. I am
just waiting to see if he makes one more wrong step.
"You saw that little
American girl, Jendayi Frazer [US Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs] trotting around the globe like a prostitute, declaring
that the MDC had won."
Jabulani Sibanda, chairman
of the war veterans, who are accused of spearheading the post-election
violence, told IRIN that "The [presidential] vote is no longer
a secret [ballot]. It is a responsibility that has been thrust into
the hands of people to defend the revolution. It is no longer an
election about manifestos but about defending Zimbabwe from re-colonisation
through the Western-funded MDC."
MDC spokesman Nelson
Chamisa has called for more international election observers from
the SADC, the AU and the UN to be deployed well ahead of the election.
"Hundreds of MDC members have fled from rural areas after being
beaten up or threatened and had their homes and livestock set on
fire," he told IRIN.
"Ideally, we would
want to have more than 6,000 observers in the rural areas, because
our election agents in the countryside in the first round of voting
have all fled their homes because of working for the MDC."
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