Sat 17 Nov 2007
I write daily and often, amongst other things, about the mediated talks in
And I have been interested in the beginning of the payback for the opposition MDC, following their support of the recent constitutional amendment.
Maybe this is the beginning that I am waiting for. A modicum of common sense. A suggestion of some sensibility.
But I remain unconvinced.
As yet…
“The Zimbabwean government has published a draft bill to reform electoral laws following a surprise agreement last month between the ruling party and the opposition, a state-run daily said Saturday. The opposition Movement for Democratic Change reached an agreement with the government in late September on the adoption of a bill that would pave the way for joint presidential and legislative elections next year. The Herald newspaper said the draft Electoral Laws Amendment Bill 2007 would bar the military, police and prison officers from any involvement in elections beyond providing security. It would empower aggrieved candidates to demand recounts and require that the government-appointed electoral commission consult all contesting parties before marking constituency and ward boundaries, the report said. It would also compel public broadcasters to report impartially and give equal airtime to all candidates, said The Herald.
Previous elections in
About the only problem I can see initially is controlling the military, police and prison officers from interfering in the ballot. They work as autonomous bodies and I can’t see ZANU PF actually being able to exercise that sort of control.
And it worries me that included in the list is not the war veterans, the youth brigades and the youth militia. Who is going to control them? And what written assurance will the opposition seek to prevent these people becoming involved? What protection will the opposition and their supporters have to prevent the outside interference affecting the ballot result?
Take care.
‘debvhu
(Source)
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