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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Opposition
complains of pre-election intimidation
IRIN News
March 06, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77157
Bulawayo - Both
groups of the split main Zimbabwean opposition party have lodged
complaints with the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) that their
candidates are being harassed by the police ahead of the general
elections on 29 March.
The two factions
of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) have each claimed that
their members have either been arrested, abducted or beaten up by
the police, and have also alleged acts of violence against their
supporters by the ruling ZANU-PF party.
"The police
are acting in a partisan manner, banning our candidates and their
supporters from conducting door-to-door campaigns, especially in
the city," said Nelson Chamisa, spokesman for the MDC faction
led by Morgan Tsvangirai.
On 29 February,
police arrested Marvelous Khumalo, an MDC parliamentary candidate,
and 11 other party supporters during a campaign in Chitungiza, a
high-density satellite township 25km south of the capital, Harare.
Kumalo is still in custody.
Police commissioner-general
Augustine Chihuri brushed aside claims that the police were partisan,
and said Khumalo and his campaign team had been arrested for violent
behaviour. "Those people were arrested for a crime they know
- they were carrying weapons and campaigning aggressively. The police
are simply doing their job of maintaining law and order."
Chihuri maintained
that the police were impartial in discharging their duties, as they
had also arrested members of the ruling ZANU-PF in the past weeks
for engaging in acts of violence. A ZANU-PF lawmaker, Isaiah Shumba,
was arrested recently for brandishing a gun in public.
The commissioner-general
has warned that police
would use force to deal with perpetrators of violence in the
election period.
A ZANU-PF official,
Elliot Manyika, has also dismissed allegations of acts of violence
by his party's activists against MDC supporters. "We are not
a violent party, we are carrying out our campaign peacefully, and
such reports [of violence] really are false," he told IRIN.
Abednico Bhebhe,
a spokesman for the rival MDC faction, led by academic Arthur Mutambara,
said his group had lodged a complaint with the electoral authorities,
protesting intimidation of supporters. "Intimidation is rampant
and the conditions are not conducive for a free and fair election,"
he claimed.
No airtime
The
MDC has also accused the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC),
the state broadcaster, for denying its candidates airtime. "It
is our view that ZBC has abused its privilege to give unfair advantage
to ZANU-PF ... even though, as a publicly funded broadcaster, you
are expected to give equal coverage to all political players,"
the Tsvangirai-led MDC group wrote in a letter of complaint to the
ZBC management.
Analysts said
the opposition's complaints did not bode well for the government,
as a pre-election assessment team from the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) was in the country to assess the situation.
Tanki Mothae,
director of SADC's Organ on Politics, Defence and Security, told
IRIN that the team had arrived in Zimbabwe in the third week of
February and had already compiled its preliminary report on conditions
ahead of the elections.
Mothae said
he would not divulge the contents of the report, neither would he
comment on whether the SADC team had reported the alleged violence
and intimidation by the MDC.
"Our entire
team is leaving on Sunday [9 March] and about 150 election observers
have been accredited. As far as we are concerned, everything is
going on well and we are looking forward to this election,"
Monthae said.
Civic organisations
pointed out that the SADC should have deployed observers to assess
pre-election conditions, including the registration of voters and
public inspection of the voters' roll, as well as the general environment,
more than a month ago. They argued that prevailing conditions did
not favour a free and fair election.
Xolani Zitha,
coordinator of the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition (CZC), a civic organisations umbrella
body, said the state-run media's refusal to cover opposition candidates
was a violation of the SADC guidelines on the conduct of a free
and fair election.
"Our teams
on the ground report that there is intimidation going on and we
have also observed ... the conduct of the police ... when dealing
with opposition members," Zitha alleged. "We urge the
SADC team to consult widely, so that we as civil society can also
make an input of such concerns to their reports."
President Robert
Mugabe, who is facing stiff challenges in the presidential race
from the MDC's Tsvangirai and Simba Makoni, a former ZANU-PF member
standing as an independent candidate, has said his government would
only invite "friendly" countries, such as those in SADC,
to observe the elections.
European countries
have been banned from observing the polls. Local observers have
been invited to submit their applications, but organisations such
as the CZC may not be accredited because according to Zitha, "They
see us as hostile elements."
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