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How
Zanu-PF plans to steal the Zimbabwe elections
RW Johnson
May 30, 2011
Despite clear
and binding international agreements to the contrary, evidence now
available shows that President Robert Mugabe's ruling Zanu-PF is
again planning to steal the next elections with the help of a grossly
rigged electoral register.
After the 2008
elections, in which the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
won a parliamentary majority but in which the MDC leader, Morgan
Tsvangirai, was forced to withdraw from the ensuing presidential
election due to the overwhelming level of government-orchestrated
violence, Zimbabwe's neighbours in the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) stitched together a deal, the Global
Political Agreement, which saw Mugabe remain as President with
Tsvangirai as Prime Minister and a commitment to a new constitution
with free and fair elections.
In terms of the GPA the constitution has to be passed
by a popular referendum before elections can take place, probably
around June 2012. But, of course, the new register is thus fundamental
to both the referendum and the elections - for parliament and President.
In all previous elections the electoral register
has been a major source of controversy. Drawn up by Tobaiwa Mudede,
an outspoken Zanu-PF supporter, it was notoriously full of dead
and fictional voters - who always voted Zanu-PF. Mudede regarded
the register as a state secret and defied all court orders to make
it available to the press or opposition parties.
When an NGO did finally procure a copy in 2002,
it was found to contain at least twice as many voters as was plausible.
Despite that, the supposedly independent Zimbabwe Election Commission
(ZEC) - in fact stuffed with government supporters - never upheld
any complaints about the register.
With this unhappy history in mind SADC insisted
that a wholly new voters' roll be drawn up and that all the personnel
of ZEC be changed to allow a properly independent commission to
be constituted. These changes were then confirmed by the Zimbabwean
parliament.
In fact all this has been illegally set aside by
ZEC. Mudede, though rising 70 and way past retirement age, has been
retained as Registrar-General - clearly for political reasons. Similarly,
several of the old ZEC members have, despite the stipulations of
the GPA, been re-appointed to the new ZEC.
Under their
guidance the ZEC has agreed not to do as SADC and Parliament
determined but simply to keep the old, discredited register and
add new names to it. The results are grotesque. Although the new
roll is a closely guarded secret I have managed to gain sight of
a copy.
The first notable fact is that an impossible 5,727,902
voters were registered on the 2008 register. Given that over four
million Zimbabweans have fled Mugabe's rule, most analysts now believe
Zimbabwe's population has fallen to between 8 and 10 million. Even
if the 10 million figure is preferred, 60% of the population is
aged under 18 and all previous surveys show a maximum 80% voter
registration rate.
So the maximum possible number on the voters' roll
should be 3.2m. So the 2008 register had at least 2.5m too many
voters on it - more than enough to settle any election. Thus the
(illegal) decision to retain the old 2008 register as a baseline
has fatal consequences.
However, Mudede has now added another 366,550 new
voters - a remarkable figure given that Zimbabwe's population is
shrinking. Moreover, these are not all young voters coming of age.
Although Zimbabwe's average life expectancy is now down to 44.8
years, an astonishing 33,206 of these new voters are aged 50-70,
and another 16,649 are over 70.
Even more remarkable, 1418 are over 100, although
everyone knows that the famines and hardships of recent years have
carried off most of the old. Oddly, although it is legally required
for all voters to give a valid address, quite a few names on the
roll lack one. There are also hundreds of under-age persons registered,
some of them as young as two or three years old.
It is also striking that these anomalies are by
no means evenly distributed across all constituencies. Instead they
are concentrated in seats where Zanu-PF feels under threat. Thus
in Mount Darwin East one finds 118 voters aged over 100, the majority
of them all born on the same day, 1 January 1901. Another nine 96
year olds are all born on 1 January 1905 and 25 further 91 year
olds are all born on 1 January 1910.
Once one looks at the new register as a whole one
finds there are no less than 16,828 voters all born on the same
day, 1 January 1901. Such a concentration of 110 year olds with
identical birthdays is no doubt a planetary record. Even more remarkable,
though, no less than 1101 of these are concentrated in Mugabe's
birthplace, Zvimba, which, no doubt, will help to guarantee a pleasing
election result there.
All told the register includes 41,119 voters aged
over 100. Yet in Britain, with a population more than five times
the size of Zimbabwe and with an enormously higher life expectancy,
there are only 10,000 people aged over 100. It seems clear that
Mudede has only arrived at such absurd figures by systematically
failing to remove dead voters from the rolls.
What is clear enough of Zimbabwe's 41,119 centenarians
is that if they ever really existed they doubtless died long ago.
It is also interesting to note that 18,525 voters are listed merely
as being attached to "housing co-operative" associations
without any proper address. Such phantom voters vote early and often
in Zimbabwe. There is a notable concentration of such address-less
voters in Harare North which helped Zanu-PF evict the MDC MP Trudy
Stevenson from the seat in 2008.
I will publish
a full report
on the voters' roll under the auspices of the South African Institute
of Race Relations, together with supporting documentation. President
Zuma has acted well on this matter so far, insisting that Mugabe
be held to the terms of the Global Political Agreement (GPA), to
Mugabe's vocal irritation.
However, this
new data on the voters' roll makes it crystal clear that Mugabe
intends to subvert the GPA and cheat his way back to power again.
If President Zuma and his SADC colleagues are serious, they can
prevent this. The agreement to free and fair elections with a new
voters' roll was part of the Global Political Agreement which Mugabe
personally signed. SADC is due to meet to consider the situation
on May 20 in Windhoek,
Namibia.
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