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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
ZCTU
position on current political talks
Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU)
July 12, 2008
http://www.zctu.co.zw/newsflash_view.cfm?nfid=26
We, the General
Council members of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU),
meeting at the Quality International Hotel in Harare today 12 July
2008 for an update on the current political situation in the country,
in the aftermath of the 27 June 2008 Presidential Election Run-off;
Pursuant of
our Communiqué issued on 21 June 2008, which focused on:
- the violent
environment prior to the holding of the Presidential Election
Run Off of 27 June 2008;
- the conduct
of political parties during the campaigning period; and
- the State's
preparedness for holding a free and fair election
Noting that
the 21 June 2008 Communiqué highlighted that,
- Political
violence in the country had reached alarming if not catastrophic
proportions;
- The 27 June
Presidential election was not an election, but a declaration of
war against the people of Zimbabwe by the ruling party;
- Dozens of
people were murdered due to politically motivated violence;
- Thousands
of people were threatened with death, beaten, tortured and harassed
for expressing or supporting the opposition political party;
- People were
forced to attend political rallies failure of which they were
severely beaten up;
- There was
deployment and sprouting of several bases led by the ruling party
militia that harassed and perpetrated political violence;
- The usual
poling officers, that is teachers and other civil servants, where
sidelined in the running of elections in favour of ruling party
supporters;
- Thousands
of people were displaced through political violence and thereby
unable to vote;
- The State
President made it clear that he would not accept defeat even if
he lost the elections.
- Very few
local observers were accredited to oversee the conduct of the
elections;
- There was
continuous harassment of workers on their way to and from work
by youth militias who had been deployed in suburbs;
- Opposition
party agents were harassed, some killed and therefore were unable
to monitor what happened in some wards on the day of the election;
- The opposition
was not granted permission to campaign;
- There was
a complete black out of the opposition in the public media and
in case where it was mentioned, it was always in negative light;
- Potential
voters were threatened if they voted for the opposition;
Further noting
that the 21 June 2008 Communiqué conveyed the resolutions
that:
- The Government
disbands bases in all suburbs and unofficial road blocks manned
by the youths militia;
- The government
stops violence and allow local observers that were accredited
for the March 29, 2008 Harmonised Elections to observe the Presidential
Run Off.
- The ZCTU
would not accept an
outcome of a flawed election and reserved the right to reject
result of a flawed election;
Having reconvened
today, 12 July 2008 to discuss in particular:
- The process
and the outcome of the Presidential Run Off Elections
- The current
efforts towards resolving the election dispute
- The Way forward
And having observed
that:
- None of the
demands stated in the communiqué of 21 June 2008 were attended
to;
- The Southern
Africa Development Community (SADC) Election Observer Mission
said The elections
did not represent the will of the people of Zimbabwe ;
- The Pan-African
Parliament (PAP) Observer Mission concluded
that the current atmosphere prevailing in the country did not
give rise to the conduct of free, fair and credible elections...
;
- The African
Union (AU) Observer Mission also noted
that in the context of the AU Declaration of the Principles Governing
Democratic Elections in Africa, it is the considered view of the
African Union Observers Mission that the Election process fell
short of accepted AU standards ;
- The nature
of the current dispute is about the 27 June 2007 Presidential
Election Run Off, not the 29 March 2008 Harmonised Local Government,
Parliamentary, senatorial and Presidential elections;
- There are
inter-party talks going on aimed at resolving the current political
impasse;
- The current
composition and structure of negotiations should stick to the
parties of the 27th June Presidential elections, that is, Zanu
PF's Robert Mugabe and MDC's Morgan Tsvangirai.
Worried that:
- The current
mediator in the talks, South African President Thabo Mbeki is
part-time and has been leading the negotiations on Zimbabwe for
a long time without much success is perceived as sympathetic to
the ruling Zanu PF.
- Other players
not connected to the Presidential election dispute have been included
- The talks
are concentrated on the issue of power sharing and Government
of National Unity (GNU) at the exclusion of other options
We therefore
resolve that:
- The 27 July
2008 elections were not free and fair and did not represent the
will of the people of Zimbabwe;
- That the
mediation efforts should not be left to President Thabo Mbeki
alone, it has to be expanded to include other AU members, preferably
a retired President who would work full-time;
- The MDC
fronted by Authur Mutambara should not be part of the talks since
the election in dispute is that of 27 June 2008, of which only
two Presidential candidates, Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai
took part;
- Inter-party
talks should take less than two months because the economy is
in bad shape, violence is continuing and people are suffering;
- A Government
of National Unity is a subversion of our national Constitution
and only a Neutral Transitional Authority should be put in place
with a mandate to take Zimbabwe to fresh, free and fair elections
that will hopefully not be disputed by the parties.
Visit the ZCTU
fact sheet
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