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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Hear
no evil, see no evil, and speak no evil: A critique of the ZEC report
on the 2008 General Elections
Derek
Matyszak, Research and Advocacy Unit, Zimbabwe
June
12 , 2009
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A critique of
the ZEC report on the 2008
General Elections
Introduction
On the 29th March 2008
Zimbabwe simultaneously held elections for the presidency, two houses
of assembly and local government councils, as required by a recent
constitutional amendment. The synchronisation of these four polls
earned the elections the moniker "harmonised elections",
distinguishing these polls from the run-off in the presidential
election held on 27 June, 2009 after no candidate officially emerged
with an absolute majority (50% plus one vote).
There were two
salient features of the period immediately after the harmonised
elections which dominated political comment, observers' reports
and the media: the long delay in releasing the results of the first
round of the presidential election, only announced on the 2nd May,
2009, and the endemic political violence that erupted, unmatched
in scale and brutality since the Gukurahundi years. Reports from
human rights NGOs revealed that over 170 MDC supporters were murdered
in over 17 000 incidents of violence and abuse and that more than
20 000 homes were burnt and destroyed, resulting in massive numbers
of internally displaced people fleeing the violence. With the exception
of isolated and probably retaliatory attacks, the victims of the
violence were almost exclusively those perceived to be MDC supporters.
The perpetrators were almost exclusively ZANU PF supporters and
predominantly members of the army.
The extreme nature of the violence and its extent led to an almost
universal condemnation of the electoral process, and even "solidarity"
observer missions usually sympathetic to the Mugabe government and
ZANU PF party, found themselves unable to approve the election.
The SADC Electoral Observer Mission noted that electoral violence
was acknowledged by all parties. It concluded that the elections
"did not conform to the SADC Guidelines Governing Democratic
Elections" and that the elections "did not reflect the
will of the people". The Electoral Commissions Forum of SADC
countries reported that "the Principles for Election Management,
Monitoring and Observation in the SADC region (PEMMO) guidelines
in the Pre-Election phase, such as those relating to campaigning,
access to the media, use of public resources, political violence
and intimidation, were not adequately complied with".
The Pan African Parliament observers noted that "the prevailing
political environment through the country was tense, hostile and
volatile as it has been characterised by an electoral campaign marred
by high levels of intimidation, violence, displacement of people,
abductions and loss of life". This Mission concluded that:
"the current atmosphere prevailing in the country did not
give rise to the conduct of free, fair and credible elections".
International electoral observer missions conventionally adopt extremely
diplomatic, if not euphemistic, language in their reports and are
generally reticent when it comes to attributing the source of the
violence. The fact that they departed from this convention to some
extent is an indication of the extremity of the violence.
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