|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Conditions
for free elections "don't exist," says lawyers group
Monsters and
Critics
March 24, 2008
View story on the Monsters and Critics website
Harare - Zimbabwe
cannot have a free and fair election in the current environment
where President Robert Mugabe - himself a candidate - maintains
almost total control over the electoral system, one of the country's
leading civil rights groups warned.
A report by
Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum released at the weekend concluded that 'conditions
do not exist for the holding of free and fair elections on Saturday
this week.'
It cited a 'partisan'
and weak electoral commission that runs the elections, widespread
military involvement in the process and mass vote buying.
The report comes
amid widespread fears of vote rigging - which independent observers
say have given 84-year-old Mugabe victories in the last three elections
since 2000 - in a complicated poll held on o only one day, compared
with three in previous elections. Observers also warn that the state
of ill preparedness of the state-appointed Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(ZEC) will lead to confusion.
On Sunday, opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai warned supporters of his Movement for Democratic
Change that Mugabe would 'use every trick in the book to subvert
the will of the people.'
In a move setting
the scene for potential confrontation with the regime, Tsvangirai
urged supporters not to leave the polling station areas after they
had cast their ballots, but to stay and 'defend your vote.'
Poll watchers
have reported a dramatic surge throughout the country in the last
few weeks in support for opposition parties, particularly for Tsvangirai's
MDC, while Mugabe's backing appears to falter, amid signs of divisions
in his ruling ZANU (PF) party.
Although the
Forum report says that the ruling party's 'institutions of intimidation
... are being used countrywide,' observers say that the level of
violent intimidation that has characterised previous elections is
considerably lower, and that opposition parties are able to campaign
relatively freely.
However, the
Forum says that the ZEC 'continues to operate in a politically partisan
manner.' 'The key personnel who will run the elections on the ground
are pro-ruling party sympathisers, such as ex-army officers and
intelligence officers,' adding, one provincial electoral officer
was a serving officer.
Judge George
Chiweshe, the chairman, appointed by Mugabe, is a former brigadier-general
'and a staunch supporter of ZANU (PF),' it said. Recently amended
electoral laws put the ZEC in charge of maintaining the voters'
roll, but the law has been ignored and it remains under the control
of registrar-general Tobaiwa Mudede, whom the Forum described as
'a fervent supporter' of Mugabe.
The Forum said
voter registration for this election had been 'selective and fairly
chaotic.' When it questioned him about severe inaccuracies, Chiweshe
'brushed the allegations aside.'
ZEC had also
'conspicuously failed' to take any action to prevent the state run
media from behaving like 'ruling party propaganda organs.'
The report also
cited the heads of the army, the police and the prison services
as saying they would not 'salute' Tsvangirai because he was 'a puppet'
and ordered their officers to vote for Mugabe. Their statements
were 'a gross abuse of office and are tantamount to treason.'
Reports said
'hundreds' of soldiers had been deployed in rural areas 'to coerce
the rural population to vote for Mugabe and his party.' Soldiers
had also been instructed to take leave to help ZANU (PF) campaign,
it said.
The forum said
Mugabe and ZANU (PF) had engaged in 'massive vote buying' by using
state resources. It cited massive pay rises for civil servants and
the distribution of millions of US dollars of imported agricultural
equipment, effectively free of charge, mostly to ruling party supporters.
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
|