Back to Index
Zim
awaits poll date ruling
Gift Phiri, DailyNews
April 02, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/article/News/4526445d-a4c9-4801-a26b-8348842cb903
The High Court will tomorrow
rule on legal challenges to a proposed June election timetable,
a vote seen as a test of democracy five years after an election
dispute triggered widespread bloodshed.
Judge President
George Chiweshe - who was the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission chairperson
in the controversial 2008 vote - is presiding over the electoral
dispute between President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai.
Mugabe on March 22 filed
an urgent chamber application seeking to be excused from complying
with a court order that forces him to proclaim dates for three Matabeleland
by-elections by end of March, arguing it would be expensive for
the cash-strapped government to stage the three ballots three months
ahead of a general election which he told the court must be held
by June 29.
But Mugabe’s coalition
partner and MDC candidate Tsvangirai says the June poll date was
not feasible. He filed an application in the High Court last Thursday
requesting that he be included in the matter as the fourth respondent
together with three former legislators Abednico Bhebhe, Njabuliso
Mguni and Norman Mpofu, who want their vacant constituencies filled
through by-elections in their constituencies.
The legal challenge by
the PM delayed the case to April 3.
Earlier last
Thursday, deputy Attorney General Prince Machaya - who represented
President Mugabe - had sought to have the matter stood down to Friday
afternoon but agreed that the matter be postponed to Wednesday after
he was served with Tsvangirai’s legal challenge.
Both politicians have
promised to abide by the court’s final word.
Tsvangirai,
who has bemoaned the slow pace in implementation of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) ahead of the poll owing to what he
terms “Zanu PF’s intransigence”, argues that Mugabe’s
court action was tantamount to unilaterally proclaiming election
dates without consulting him as PM in blatant contravention of the
GPA.
“It came as a surprise
for me that the applicant (Mugabe) has neither conferred nor consulted
me,” Tsvangirai’s attorney Chris Mhike said in court
papers.
“I verily believe
that it is my duty to illuminate the impossibility of the applicant’s
proposed timelines, which timeline he bases his application.
“In terms of the
current constitutional dispensation, the applicant (Mugabe), in
the main matter, has to consult me in my official capacity before
he makes a proclamation relating to the dissolution of Parliament.”
Mugabe had in his urgent
chamber application advised that he will dissolve Parliament and
call for harmonised elections on or before June 29, 2013.
Mugabe said
following the “Yes” vote in the March 16 constitutional
referendum, Parliament
is expected to finish passing the new constitution by May 8 after
which a proclamation on general elections will be gazetted immediately
followed by a proclamation for harmonised elections.
“In terms of the
Constitution, the life of parliament terminates on the June 29,
2013 by which date harmonised elections must be held in the country,”
Mugabe argues.
But Tsvangirai told the
court that from his “understanding and personal knowledge
of the affairs” of the country, it is unlikely that elections
will be held on or before June 29, 2013.
The ruling is expected
to address a list of challenges to the poll timetable, but the final
ruling is expected come immediately.
The March 31 deadline
was set by Justice Chiweshe in October last year at the insistence
of Mugabe, who had said he would call for general elections by end
of March.
But the veteran ruler,
89, plagued by health problems and old age, wants elections when
he can still sustain a gruelling campaigning schedule, analysts
say.
The fact that the dispute
is being played out by lawyers not unilateral action by Mugabe,
has already helped repair the image of southern Africa’s recovering
economy.
But tomorrow’s
ruling will be the real test of whether Zimbabweans trust their
judiciary and whether supporters of rival candidates accept the
result quietly in a nation synonymous with melodrama by politicians.
Meanwhile, Welshman Ncube,
leader of the smaller ruling MDC by legislative representation,
has written to regional bloc SADC stating that the June poll timetable
that Mugabe wants was not feasible.
Many ordinary Zimbabweans
insist they will not allow a repeat of the violence that killed
more than 200 people and displaced another 200 000 following a dispute
over the last election in 2008, and want a peaceful poll after fundamental
reforms.
Western donors are closely
watching the unfolding electoral process in the wake of a relatively
peaceful referendum on March 16, in a resource-rich country they
see as vital to future engagement.
Neighbouring
African states are also keeping a careful eye on proceedings after
they were hit by the knock-on effects when millions of Zimbabweans
fled in droves into exile as political and economic refugees following
violent
and disputed elections in 2008.
Zimbabwe’s economy
has yet to recover fully from the pummeling it took after the vote
violence that capped a decade of economic meltdown.
In the High Court’s
hearing tomorrow, Justice Chiweshe had deferred the matter to enable
the parties to file responses and heads of arguments.
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
|