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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
SADC
election observers - ready or not for 'D-Day' poll
IRIN
News
June 12, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78717
Election observers
from the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) began deploying
in Zimbabwe this week ahead of the 27 June presidential election
runoff, and in the middle of a ruling party campaign marked by violence
and intimidation.
Tanki Mothae, team leader
and director of the regional organization's Organ on Politics,
Defence and Security told a news conference on Thursday that this
month's ballot was a "D-Day election".
He did not comment
on the arrest
earlier in the day of opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) secretary-general Tendai Biti, or the apparent police harassment
of party leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
"Our main purpose
here is to help the people of Zimbabwe go through this election
peacefully and smoothly," said Mothae.
"We are not here
to take sides or to create confusion but to help the people of Zimbabwe.
If we see anything that is not in line with the SADC guidelines
and principles on free and fair elections we should advise so that
the mistake can be corrected."
Biti was arrested as
he flew into the capital, Harare, after a month-long self-imposed
exile. "He is facing two charges, one for treason and another
for illegally announcing the election results when that is the mandate
of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission," police spokesman, assistant
commissioner Wayne Bvudzijena, told IRIN.
Tsvangirai was
detained by
the police in the Midlands city of Kwekwe, and after his release
was again held in the town of Gweru, 60km south.
"Tsvangirai has
in the past claimed that his life was under threat and police diverted
his convoy to the police station where the vehicles were searched.
We are simply protecting him from his enemies," said Bvudzijena.
Luke Tamborinyoka, MDC
director of information, told IRIN the police action was designed
to frustrate the party ahead of the runoff vote.
"More than 60 MDC
supporters have been murdered by groups aligned to ZANU-PF, 3,000
have been hospitalised, hundreds unaccounted for, while thousands
have been displaced. While [President] Robert Mugabe is campaigning
freely, the MDC president is being frustrated. Even the last election
which we won was not free and fair, but people are ready to vote
for change by voting for Morgan Tsvangirai."
In the first round poll
on 29 March, the ruling ZANU-PF party lost control of parliament
for the first time since independence in 1980. In the presidential
election Tsvangirai took 47.9 percent of the vote, falling short
of the 50 percent plus one required to declare victory. Mugabe,
who has ruled for 28 years, managed 43.2 percent.
SADC's
woes
SADC,
the 14-member regional organisation, initially planned to deploy
300 observers, but now expects to field more than 400 by 27 June
- over three-times the number on the ground for the first
round ballot, said Mothae.
With the country grappling
with extreme shortages as a result of an eight-year recession, Mothae
admitted they were facing "a few logistical shortfalls, but
we're addressing them. Right now we are working on the accommodation
issues".
The country's dilapidated
communication system was another headache. Zimbabwe's state-controlled
mobile phone company, Net One, has battled to provide sim cards
and recharge cards for use by the observers while in the country.
"We are working
on solving the issue of communication problems. That is our biggest
challenge," said Mothae.
A UN
envoy
Meanwhile,
UN envoy Haile Menkerios is expected in Zimbabwe from 20 June to
try and ease the political tensions ahead of the poll runoff, the
UN news wire reported.
The mission by Menkerios,
the UN's assistant secretary-general for political affairs,
follows a meeting last week between Mugabe and UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon on the fringes of the global food summit in Rome.
The UN has been increasingly
vocal over the political conditions in Zimbabwe. Last month, the
High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, condemned the
killings of opposition activists as well as the harassment of nongovernmental
organisations and human rights defenders.
"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,"
she said.
"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."
SADC will have
the largest poll monitoring team on the ground. The highly-experienced
Zimbabwe
Electoral Support Network (ZESN), an umbrella body of 38 NGOs
promoting free and fair elections, has not been accredited and has
been hit by a government freeze
on civil society operations.
The authorities accuse
NGOs of working with Western powers to overthrow the government.
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