Oman Daily Observer

Zimbabwe poll authority back under pressure

- FANUEL JONGWE

Just before announcing the results, Zimbabwe Electoral Commission chief Priscilla Chigumba made a passionate plea for the country to remember the upbeat and peaceful atmosphere of polling day. “It is my most humble wish that we as Zimbabwean­s should continue in this spirit that we had on election day and that we should move on in this spirit,” Chigumba said, before declaring Emmerson Mnangagwa the winner in the early hours of Friday. But the election that ZEC ran has done little to build confidence that Zimbabwe has entered a new era of free and transparen­t voting after Robert Mugabe was ousted last year. Instead Mnangagwa’s narrow win for the ruling ZANU-PF party has been engulfed by accusation­s of fraud and malpractic­e by ZEC, as well as anger over soldiers shooting at an opposition protest where six people were killed, two days after Monday’s election. MDC opposition leader Nelson Chamisa — who has accused ZEC of playing for the same “team” as ZANU-PF — rejected the results and lashed out at what he called the “opaqueness, truth deficiency, moral decay and values deficit” of the election.

Internatio­nal observers have also questioned whether the election lived up to Mnangagwa’s promise to hold a “free and fair” vote to mark a new chapter for Zimbabwe and end the country’s isolation. The European Union observers’ preliminar­y report accusing ZEC of a “persistent lack of inclusivit­y and transparen­cy” and said its communicat­ions were poor.

ZEC was synonymous with fraud and bias under Mugabe, when elections were often marred by deadly violence. Back in 2008, the commission attracted internatio­nal ridicule for endorsing that year’s election as credible after then opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out of the presidenti­al run-off when more than 200 of his MDC supporters were killed.

Chigumba, a high court judge, was appointed to the high-profile job in January to give ZEC a fresh start after Mugabe’s fall last November. As a respected judge, she is best known for reversing a two-week ban on protests and clearing activist Evan Mawarire in 2017 of attempting to overthrow Mugabe’s regime.

“The key tenets for a credible election are transparen­cy and accountabi­lity — and ZEC is averse to both,” Tawanda Chimhini, head of Zimbabwe’s Election Resource Centre monitoring body, said ahead of polling day.

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