| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Where
are the election observers?
IRIN
News
June 10, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78666
"Delay one of the
strategies to cling onto power"
Harare - There are no
election observers officially on the ground with just 17 days left
before Zimbabwe's presidential run-off ballot. After the 29 March
poll, which saw the ruling Zanu PF lose control of parliament for
the first time since independence in 1980, there have been widespread
reports of election violence that has left at least 60 people dead
according to the opposition party, the MDC. President Robert Mugabe,
who is seeking to extend his 28-year rule against his rival, MDC
leader Morgan Tsvangirai, on 27 June, has characterised the opposition
as agents of British and US imperialism attempting to recolonise
Zimbabwe. The 29 March poll saw Tsvangirai win 47.9 percent of the
ballot, which fell short of the 50 percent plus one ballot required
for a first round win. Mugabe managed 43.2 percent in the first
round.
The justice
ministry this week began extending invitations to election observers
and said accreditation would "be done by the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) upon production of a letter of invitation"
from the ministry. Rindai Chipfunde, the director of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Support Network (ZESN), an umbrella body for 38 non-governmental
organisations promoting free and fair elections, told IRIN: "We
have not been invited for accreditation and because of that, we
cannot go and monitor preparations for the run-off, despite the
fact that time is running out." She said ZESN cannot conduct
voter education because "even though it is now some time after
we applied to go out to the electorate, ZEC has not yet responded,
so we are hamstrung." ZESN has been hit by a double whammy,
after the government recently ordered all NGOs to suspend
their activities with immediate effect and reapply for registration,
accusing civil society groups of aiding and abetting the MDC.
Last week, local
government minister Ignatius Chombo said NGOs were using food aid
in selected rural communities, in which Zanu PF was losing the strong
support it used to enjoy, to woo the electorate to vote for the
MDC. "NGOs cannot ... go into local authority areas to compete
with the government. These organizations are primarily there to
complement government efforts where necessary. At no time should
NGOs make sporadic forays into programmes that are not specified
in the memorandum of agreement [between them and government],"
Chombo said. However, the director of the National
Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (NANGO), Cephas
Zinhumwe, denied NGO involvement in politics, and said the "ban"
on NGO activities had "ugly implications". "The suspension
of the field work of NGOs is indefinite and that brings a lot of
uncertainty - given the fact that we are not sure when it will be
lifted - particularly at this time when the population urgently
requires humanitarian assistance," Zinhumwe told IRIN.
In 2007/08 international
donor agencies provided food aid to 4.1 million people, more than
a third of the population. Zimbabwe is suffering acute shortages
of power, fuel and basic commodities, and has an annual inflation
rate unofficially estimated at more than one million percent. The
2008 maize harvest is forecast to fall short of the national human
food requirement by about one million tones. Zinhumwe said NGOs
that were involved in electoral activities "can't monitor"
the run-off ballot, and that they had been effectively "crippled",
by government's ruling. "The suspension goes beyond humanitarian
activities; the electoral process that includes inspection of voters'
rolls, observations across the breath and depth of the country for
adherence to set down procedures and rules and voter education,
among other things, are now extremely difficult," Zinhumwe
said.
Mugabe has denied European
Union and other observer missions from Western countries admission
to monitor the elections, and diplomatic missions resident in the
country have been harassed by the authorities after investigating
claims of election violence. Mugabe has said the government would
invite observers from the African Union (AU), the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), the Common Market of Eastern and Southern
Africa - a trade-based bloc - the Economic Community of West African
States and representatives from Asia, Latin America and NGOs from
developing countries. However, there is no indication as yet if
all those apparently permitted to monitor the poll would do so.
The government official daily newspaper, The Herald, reported an
advance party of SADC observers had arrived, comprised of technical
staff headed by Colonel Thanki Mothae, the director of SADC's organ
on politics, defence and security.
Mothae said that the
regional body's observers "would start arriving this weekend
while the bulk of them would arrive next week." Mothae said
SADC would increase the number of observers from the 163 in the
29 March elections to "between 300 and 400" because "it
was felt that we need more observers". SADC gave a clean bill
of health to the 29 March poll, although the MDC has expressed concern
at the pattern of election violence which sees violence fall away
in the immediate run-up to the ballot and its aftermath. Apart from
the 60 politically motivated killings, the MDC claims torture camps
have been established, thousands of people displaced and homes razed
by youth militias, veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war and soldiers
in a campaign of retribution against those who voted for the opposition
in the March poll. The military has intimated that should Tsvangirai
win the 27 June ballot, there would be a coup d'etat. Mugabe met
with UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon at the at the UN's global
food summit in Rome, Italy, and agreed to a suggestion that a high-ranking
UN official be sent to the country ahead of the run-off vote.
MDC spokesperson, Nelson
Chamisa, said the delay in inviting observers was one of the strategies
by the "illegitimate government to cling onto power as much
as possible". "There are so many pits and hurdles in the
electoral field and more delays will just worsen the situation.
There is no way in which we can have free and fair elections when
voters are being killed, our rallies are being banned, we are not
getting space on national television and the official papers and
our leaders are being arrested, all this out of the sight of the
very crucial observers," Chamisa told IRIN.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|