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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Baba
Jukwa exposes special vote fraud
Wendy Muperi, Bridget Mananvire and Tendai Kamhungira,
Daily News
July 14, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/07/13/baba-jukwa-exposes-special-vote-fraud
Election officials,
security personnel and officers in diplomatic missions cast their
ballots through postal voting tomorrow, amid escalating worry over
vote rigging.
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC and shadowy Facebook character Baba
Jukwa have unveiled a well-orchestrated plot
to steal the special vote through outright lies, alleged inflation
of figures and claims that commanders will be able to tell how officers
voted.
Baba Jukwa yesterday
morning claimed that special voting is in fact starting today, not
tomorrow.
“All opposition
parties can you monitor this, it seems Zec is conniving with (names
withheld) and crew,” Baba Jukwa wrote.
“The public
is told that Sunday is day of voting, but our internal Vapunduki
Intelligence Organisation (VIO) that cops will start voting tomorrow.
“On Sunday
and Monday they will be voting for the second time and I hope those
cops will overwhelmingly teach these evil (name withheld) a lesson
they will never forget.
“To hell
with him and don’t protect his ill-gotten health or continue
making sure that his family enjoy life in Australia.”
Baba Jukwa urged
observers to closely monitor the special vote.
“Now my
concern is Sadc, AU observers and all party representatives open
your eyes open, voting starts tomorrow,” Baba Jukwa said yesterday.
In a daily blizzard
of posts, Baba Jukwa has waged an infuriated information war against
Zanu-PF, a party of which he claims to be a member.
His prediction
of Zanu-PF legislator Edward Chindori-Chininga’s demise made
him even more popular among Zimbabweans, who are desperate for change
come the next elections.
Though Zanu-PF
has rubbished Baba Jukwa’s exposés, his seemingly accurate
predictions have rattled the rank and file in the former ruling
party.
Of more than
235 000 Baba Jukwa followers, more than 166 943 locals are now following
him which translates to 71 percent.
In a Baba Jukwa
distribution of fans table, the mole claims he has 43 081 followers
in South Africa, 5 633 in the UK, Botswana 2 625, United States
1 508, Australia 1 259, Namibia 1 093, Mozambique 611 while Zambia
has 508 followers.
Postal voting
is a process where voters cast their ballots by post in advance
to ensure that voters who are unable to attend their designated
polling stations on the day of elections are allowed to vote early.
The MDC also
expressed alarm yesterday: “As MDC we are worried over reports
that some police officers are being told that their vote is being
screened somewhere,” MDC national organising secretary Nelson
Chamisa said.
“Let it
be known by every police officer that their vote is a secret and
they should not be fooled.”
Chamisa told
the Daily News that junior police officers should not succumb to
intimidation by their bosses.
“We are
watching the game. Soon we will expose those who are busy fooling
themselves on elections. We want only regular police officers (for
special voting) who are on government payroll,” said Chamisa.
During the 2008
disputed poll, members of the uniformed forces complained that
they were forced to vote under supervision of their superiors at
army camps or police stations.
Rita Makarau,
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission chairperson, has said polling stations
for special voting are going to be moved away from barracks.
Over 87 000
requests of special votes have been received for diplomatic missions,
police, army and prison guards, with police requesting 69 000 ballots,
according to the Zec.
But MDC secretary-general
Biti said over 120 000 ballots have been requested.
He said there
was need to verify whether the people who are going to vote tomorrow
are legit.
“So we
have written to Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to say prove to us
that they are civil servants, number two prove to us that they’re
actually going to be deployed on election day because the law requires
that two things be shown that you’re a serving member of the
force.
Special vote
is a privilege not a right otherwise you should queue with us on
31 July,” Biti told the Daily News.
“So to
get that privilege of voting before others, you must show that you
are a member of the special force and two, you must show that you
are actually going to be deployed so those things are areas of contestation
so we are going to challenge that.”
Biti, whose
ministry is responsible for the salaries of civil servants, said
there were 32 000 officers eligible yet there was a request for
120 000 ballots.
“For soldiers
and police 120 000 special votes have been applied for but in 2008
we had 5 000,” Biti said.
“At the
ministry of Foreign Affairs, Zimbabweans who are working in embassies
around the world who have the right to vote using postal voting
in 2008 there were less than 4 000 postal votes. In total 120 000
votes have been applied for, because they have a thieving spirit.
“Over
5 000 prison guards have applied for special votes, but these don’t
need special votes,” he said. “But to those I say when
you get in those ballot boxes, your votes are your secrets, it will
be you and your problems alone in that box,” he said.
Biti said this
would be the most critical election of this generation as it signified
an end to a crisis. Makarau told civil society leaders on Wednesday:
“We are relying on the information that we have from the police
that all the applicants are members of the uniformed police. They
have given us their names, force numbers and EC numbers and that
information will say they are all members of the police force."
“But remember
you will be observing the elections, so you will see these men and
women in the queue as they cast their vote in public,” she
said.
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