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Too
late for a free election in Zimbabwe
Claude Kapemba
February
20, 2005
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=11276
In Zimbabwe
the problem is very different. There is simply a deliberate attempt
not to do the right thing
But SADC could
still salvage something by looking through the smoke and mirrors
and having it postponed.
It will not
be possible to hold fair and credible elections in the current constitutional
and legal framework in Zimbabwe. The best thing the Southern Africa
Development Community (SADC) advance team of legal experts which
is - or was? - supposed to go to Zimbabwe to assess the electoral
system could do would be to recommend that the Zimbabwean government
postpone the elections. This would allow the necessary reforms that
have just been introduced to be institutionalised, and the verification
of the voters roll by political parties and voters to take place.
The high court in Malawi requested the Malawi Electoral Commission
to postpone last year's presidential election to allow for the verification
of the voters roll. It did so, and there is no reason why the same
cannot be done in Zimbabwe.
There are inconsistencies,
gaps and potential conflicts within the current legislative framework
that need to be clarified before Zimbabwe can hold credible elections.
The laws and institutions do not accurately reflect the political
reality of the country. The ruling Zanu PF party continues to have
a monopoly on decisions about electoral matters. Recent reforms,
including the creation of an Independent Electoral Commission (IEC),
electoral court and other electoral procedures, will make very little
difference. While the government has created what it calls an independent
electoral commission to supervise and organise elections, previous
structures - the Electoral Supervisory Commission, the registrar-general,
the Election Directorate and the Delimitation Commission - remain
in place and are fully functional. The continued existence of this
quartet structure, side by side with the new IEC, will cause confusion
and tension and make it hard for anyone to observe what is actually
happening in the management of elections. Zimbabwe has also kept
intact legislation such as the Public Order and Security Act and
the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, which are
inimical to freedom of expression and the press respectively.
What effect
could a SADC delegation of lawyers from South Africa, Lesotho and
Namibia - countries that form a troika in the regional organ on
politics, defence and security - have on the electoral process in
Zimbabwe? The brief of such a team would be to investigate how Zimbabwe
is complying with SADC principles and guidelines and report to SADC
heads of state. But does the Zimbabwean government take these guidelines
seriously? Patrick Chinamasa, the minister of justice, seems to
regard them as a political instrument that countries must follow
to upgrade their electoral systems, rather than as a legal instrument.
Indeed they are not legally binding and offer no legal recourse
to SADC if a member does not observe them. What, then, could SADC
do if Zimbabwe did not comply with its guidelines and principles?
What Chinamasa
might have missed is that the principles have opened space for political
recourse if SADC deems it worthwhile to intervene in a member state
that does not comply with them. This is why, I think, it would not
be too late for the SADC advance team to go to Zimbabwe, even at
this late stage. The political options available to SADC to sanction
a country that does not comply could include expulsion from SADC,
and if the infractions are deemed serious enough it could even contemplate
imposing economic sanctions on a member state. Chinamasa also, in
an effort to diminish the importance of these principles and guidelines,
said they were simply a road map to guide the democratic process
in the various SADC countries, and could not be applied uniformly
across the board because countries were at different levels of democratic
development.
This might suggest
that the problem with elections in Zimbabwe is the same sort of
structural weaknesses that the Democratic Republic of Congo or Angola
face. But in fact in Zimbabwe the problem is very different. There
is simply a deliberate attempt not to do the right thing. For example,
Zimbabwe had a unique chance to introduce changes to the constitution
and the Electoral Act after the 2002 elections. It is not clear
why these reforms had to wait until SADC came up with guidelines.In
fact, the SADC guidelines are not the first. The African Union has
guidelines that member states are supposed to follow and apply and
which are similar to SADC's. Further, electoral reforms in Zimbabwe
have been called for since 2000 and recommendations - including
the ones proposed in the SADC guidelines - had already been articulated
by the opposition and civil society, regional and local.
Zanu PF knew
it had no option but to introduce changes to the administration
of elections, and there was no need to wait until just two months
before the elections to do so. The Zimbabwean government deliberately
delayed electoral reforms in a calculated move to ensure there would
not be enough time for the opposition to scrutinise the electoral
process. The government seems to be applying the same tactic in
dealing with SADC. Consensus on the rules of the electoral game
is crucial for creating the basic atmosphere for a fair election.
A dialogue on these rules between the main political parties, Zanu-PF
and the Movement for Democratic Change, held early enough to make
a difference, would have gone a long way towards establishing confidence
in the system and reducing tension between the parties and among
their supporters.
*Claude Kapemba
is research manager of the Electoral Institute of Southern Africa
and writes in his personal capacity
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