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Zimbabwe: 'The Election Will Not Be Free And Fair'


Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)
 

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Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)

ANALYSIS
28 March 2008
Posted to the web 28 March 2008

Ephraim Nsingo and Tonderai Kwidini
Harare

Where to begin with listing the concerns that surround Saturday's general elections in Zimbabwe?

The widely-documented harassment and physical abuse of opposition supporters and rights activists in the months preceding the polls by government supporters and state forces -- and the lingering fear cast by even greater levels of intimidation during previous parliamentary elections in 2005 and 2000, and the presidential poll of 2002?

Or, with complaints that the voters' roll includes thousands of ghost voters who can be drafted into service for President Robert Mugabe and the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), and about a registration process for actual voters that many have described as flawed?

The alleged manipulation of food aid to ensure support for the ruling party, at a time when the United Nations World Food Programme estimates that some four million Zimbabweans are in need of assistance (about a quarter of the population, which is in the region of 13 million)?

Or, with the bias towards Mugabe and ZANU-PF on the part of the state broadcasting services, of critical importance in the absence of independent local radio and television stations -- and given restrictions on the independent print media?

The reported shortage of polling stations in urban areas known as opposition strongholds, alongside a redrawing of constituencies in favour of the rural areas said to favour ZANU-PF?

Or, with the exclusion of election observers from countries which have criticised the Mugabe government, and of journalists from foreign media organisations who have done the same -- even as "repression and surveillance" of local journalists continues, according to a Mar. 21 press release from the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders?

Then there is the disenfranchisement of millions of Zimbabweans who have fled the political and economic disarray in their country, and who might vote for the opposition if allowed to cast ballots abroad. Also: Statements by various branches of the country's security services indicating that they would not tolerate an opposition victory Mar. 29, allegations that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) is not impartial -- and a presidential ruling that allows police into polling stations.

While officials claim this move is for the assistance of illiterate and disabled voters, others view it as another thinly veiled attempt to rig the vote in favour of Mugabe and ZANU-PF. Independent monitors have questioned recent national polls held in this Southern African country.

In the midst of these and other difficulties, the prospects for a just election appear dim, says Takura Zhangazha, an advocacy officer at the Zimbabwean chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa.

"The election will not be free and fair. A lot of people make sweeping statements that this election has been without incident, but it's only true in comparison to previous elections. People are still being intimidated, parties cannot campaign freely, and because of the tough laws journalists are being banned from covering the elections. All this diminishes the chance of a free and fair election."

In another worrying development, "many in rural regions (are) fearful that there will be retribution after the elections" against those seen as supporting the opposition, says Simeon Mawanza, Zimbabwe researcher at Amnesty International. He was quoted in a Mar. 26 press release from the rights watchdog.

Saturday's polls come after nearly a decade of increasingly authoritarian rule in Zimbabwe. Since being confronted some eight years ago with its first credible electoral challenge from an opposition party -- the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) -- government has engaged in a variety of human rights abuses, and embarked on a controversial land redistribution programme that saw farms taken from minority whites for resettlement by landless blacks. This move was interpreted by certain analysts as a bid to shore up support among voters.

A number of confiscated farms are now said to be in the hands of high-ranking officials, rather than those of Zimbabwe's poor, while agricultural output has declined substantially. Hyper-inflation, unemployment of about 80 percent, shortages of basic goods and foreign currency, frequent power cuts and a decline in service provision routinely prompt questions about how the country remains afloat, even with the help of remittances sent from the vast diaspora.

Efforts by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) to resolve tensions in Zimbabwe have not been successful, and the poll will take place in violation of several aspects of the SADC Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections, adopted by the regional body in 2004.

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Mugabe, in power since independence in 1980 and now standing for a sixth term in office, accuses Western nations of engineering the crisis in Zimbabwe in response to the eviction of white farmers. The country is under sanctions from the European Union (this in response to irregularities in the 2002 presidential elections) and the United States; however, these are targeted more at senior officials than ordinary Zimbabweans.

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