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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Bill
Watch 24/2008: Election observers
Veritas
June 14, 2008
SADC
Observer Mission
On
the 12th June The SADC Election Observer Mission started deploying
observers for the June 27 presidential election run-off. There will
be than 400 observers, an increase from the 168 during the March
29 polls. Over 300 are already here and more are arriving on an
hourly basis. The Mission will deploy six teams in each of the 10
Provinces. Their spokesman has said that they are trying to observe
in as many areas as possible, but obviously they cannot cover all
9231 polling stations and it is up to local observer teams to try
and cover all the polling stations.
Local
observers
It is of great concern that the largest observer network in the
country, the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network [ZESN], comprising 38 organisations,
has not yet been able to get its observers accredited by the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission [ZEC] and, to ZESN's knowledge, no other
civil society, faith-based organisation or any other local observer
bodies have been able to do so. [As this run-off election is a continuation
of the election held on 29th March, there is nothing in the electoral
laws and regulations that specifies that observers previously accredited
should have to apply to be re-accredited. If ZEC is insisting on
re-accreditation they have an obligation to see it is expedited.]
Note: of the observers trained and deployed through ZESN for the
first round of the elections, subsequently 12 were assaulted, 187
displaced, and 75 harassed or intimidated or had property damaged.
Some new observers have had to be recruited and these would have
to be trained. Local organisations also need to work out the logistics
of deploying their observers. The delay in accreditation of local
observers is sewing mistrust.
New
Information from ZEC
Polling
Officers:
ZEC will be using over 64 000 polling officers [7 per polling station
- there are 9231 polling stations]. Polling officers will be drawn
from the Public Service [including teachers], the Health Service
and local authorities.
Proposed
increase in number of polling agents: ZEC has agreed that
the number of candidates' election agents permitted inside
each polling station should be increased from one to two per candidate.
An appropriate amendment to the Electoral Regulations will be gazetted
soon.
Training
of election officials: Training of constituency election
officers and polling station officers will continue up to the 22nd
June.
Presidential
election and by-election calendar
24th
January: Start of "Election Period" for 2008
Harmonized Elections [date of publication of proclamation calling
the elections]
16th
May: Gazetting of polling date for presidential run-off
Election and by-elections
2nd
June: Accreditation of international and local observers
and journalists by ZEC commenced at the Harare and Bulawayo Polytechnics.
International observers who observed the last election do not need
a new invitation from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs [new observers
do] but still need to be accredited. Local observers need to apply
for an invitation from the Minister of Justice before seeking accreditation.
The process of accreditation will continue until polling day.
4th
June: Checking of applications for postal votes by the
Chief Elections Officer commenced. ZEC said it had invited election
agents and observers to witness this process. The checking will
be done in Committee Room No. 6 at the Harare International Conference
Centre [HICC] from 8am to 7pm, Monday to Friday, until 17th June.
17th
June: Closing date for receipt of applications for postal
votes. All applications must reach the Chief Elections Officer [by
hand at the HICC or by registered post to P.B. 7782, Causeway] by
noon on this day.
20th
June: Postal Ballot Boxes will be sealed. This will be
done at ward centres, and election agents and observers are entitled
to be present. Envelopes containing postal votes will be placed
unopened in this box and will only be opened after polling on the
27th June.
27th
June: Polling day for Presidential Run-off Election and
By-Elections
The election
period [and the duties and functions of observers] continues until
the announcement of the results
Enfranchisement
and disenfranchisement
Replacement
of lost IDs to enable registered voters to vote on 27th June:
The Herald of 13th June reported that the Registrar-General's
Office has deployed mobile teams countrywide to assist registered
voters to replace lost, defaced and torn national identity documents
ahead of the June 27 presidential run-off election, and that the
exercise will continue until 27th June. One contesting party has
expressed concern that issuing of new IDs will be done on a partisan
basis - i.e. only in areas where the other party has known supporters.
Continuing
voter registration: Voter Registration goes on all year
and is still continuing. But only voters registered before 14th
February are eligible to vote in the run-off. Concern has been expressed
by one party that secret voter registration is taking place on a
large scale with people being given voter registration certificates
backdated to before 14th February, which would enable them to vote.
Displaced
people: One party has claimed that over 25,000 of its supporters
have been displaced and 3000 are in hospital as a result of political
violence. These are known party supporters. As well as these, many
other people have also fled their homes because of intimidation
after the last round of voting. The numbers are difficult to estimate
as only those connected with some organisations have been recorded.
For example, the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe has claimed that teachers have been
targeted and that according to their records over 7 000 teachers
have fled, most of them from rural areas, more than 5 000 have been
beaten and about 600 hospitalised, while at least 231 teachers'
houses have been burnt. The General Agriculture and Plantation Workers
Union of Zimbabwe [GAPWUZ] has reported
that since the election 40,0000 farm workers have been displaced.
For ZESN figures see above.
Most of these
displaced people are now living some distance from their home areas
and are unlikely to be able to return in time to vote. As they can
only vote in their home areas - in the wards in which they are registered,
their displacement has effectively disenfranchised them.
Denial
of postal votes for Zimbabweans in the Diaspora: The issue
of the disenfranchised millions in the Diaspora has not been given
the priority it deserves. At least half of Zimbabwe's eligible
voters are probably living outside the country. Most have left through
necessity. Their remittances have been estimated by some economist
as constituting the largest sector of the economy at present. Their
skills are vital to Zimbabwe's future. But they have been
refused participation in the election.
Update
on Bills, Acts, Statutory Instruments
No
new Bill or Acts gazetted
Statutory
instruments gazetted:-
- SI 88/2008
- making imported newspapers "luxury items" for customs
duty purposes [duty payable in foreign currency]
- SI 89/2008
- increasing the customs duty on imported newspapers from 5% to
40%
- SI 90/2008
- another raising of the income tax threshold and tax bands for
2008 [replacing SI 63/2008 gazetted in April]
- SI 91/2008
- general conditions of service for employees of ZEC [largely
based on the corresponding regulations for members of the Public
Service]
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