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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
High
Court to hear special vote challenge Monday
Gift Phiri, Daily News
July 14, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/07/14/high-court-to-hear-special-vote-challenge-monday
High Court judge
Justice George Chiweshe will Monday hear an appeal by Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC party to prevent a special
vote by security and electoral officers who will be on duty
on polling day.
Morgan Komichi,
MDC deputy national chairman, said in his court application the
number of officers casting their ballot today has been vastly inflated,
yet the case has been set down for hearing by Chiweshe who ran the
2008 vote for Monday, a day after the special vote has already started.
The application
cites Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) as the first respondent,
co-ministers of Home Affairs Theresa Makone and Kembo Mohadi as
second respondents, police chief Augustine Chihuri and the police
force as third respondents and Finance minister Tendai Biti as the
fourth respondent.
Komichi asked
the High Court to stop the special two-day vote, saying the 69 000
police officers set to vote on Sunday and Monday were way above
the 44 133 officers shown on a ministry of Finance salary schedule
for the whole country.
“Applicants
have it on good authority that 1st respondent intends to allow 69
222 persons to vote via the special ballot yet the official number
of persons under 3rd respondent’s command does not exceed
44 113 in terms of information from 2nd respondent, who is their
employer and 4th respondent who is the minister of Finance,”
says Komichi’s application.
“Despite
being requested to explain the disparities, 3rd respondent has refused
to furnish applicants with an explanation. 1st respondent on its
part has failed to accede to applicants’ requests for the
disparity in the number of police officers as evident in the government
records and the alarmingly huge number that is seeking to register
via the special ballot vote.”
The court challenge,
handled by leading rights lawyer Harrison Nkomo, avers that Komichi
has a valid and reasonable apprehension that the special ballot
box is fraught with malignant disparities caused by the lack of
transparency on who actually constitutes the 69 222 police officers
who have applied for the special ballot vote when in fact the official
figures show a glaringly low figure of just about 44 113.
“The special
voting exercise should therefore be stayed until 1st respondent
has properly verified and authenticated the findings on the 69 222
applications whereupon same should be made public so as not to mar
the elections with irregularities potentially arising from a disputed
special vote,” Komichi says in the court papers.
“Alternatively
this court is requested to direct 1st respondent to set up mechanisms
by which the special voting exercise shall be transparent, its beneficiaries
fully verifiable and that 1st respondent shall not exceed the official
number of police officers in the special voting exercise.”
Tsvangirai and
President Robert Mugabe are running neck-and-neck in polls but well
ahead of three other candidates.
To win outright,
a candidate needs more than 50 percent of the votes cast by the
6,2 million eligible voters, or it goes to a run-off.
That date could
slip depending on any legal challenges. The 61-year-old prime minister
who beat Mugabe in 2008 has joined forces with ex-Zanu PF politburo
member Simba Makoni, to form the Grand Coalition for change.
Tsvangirai squaring
off with Mugabe for the third time is known for regaling crowds
with traditional riddles and commands a cult-like following.
He has expressed
fears of electoral fraud in a process that has been fraught with
poor funding and a myriad of irregularities.
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