The Citizen (KZN)

Campaign seeks volunteers to watch for inconsiste­ncies

- Zanele Mbengo

Election Watch under Defend Our Democracy is mobilising other civil society movements to join in its quest to observe free and fair elections in the country.

Zaakirah Vadi, executive director at Defend Our Democracy, said the Election Watch campaign was a local observer campaign.

She stressed observers were meant to be independen­t.

“Observers are not linked to any political party. They can be from civil society organisati­ons or ordinary citizens. They have access to all voting stations and can watch proceeding­s from the time stations open to the time they close, and the counting process that follows,” Vadi noted.

“For the campaign, observers will be required to share their feedback from voting stations via an observatio­n app. This feedback will give us live, on-the-ground reports from a number of voting stations,” she said.

She added the informatio­n will be collated and analysed to pronounce on the integrity of the electoral process.

Election Watch is a national civil society campaign aimed at “observing and pronouncin­g on the integrity of the 2024 national and provincial government elections in South Africa”.

“We aim at ensuring the overall success of the elections through educating and mobilising South Africans to participat­e in the election process and to become active participan­ts in our democracy,” Election Watch said.

It highlighte­d that 2024 marked 30 years of democracy and in the past three decades, it had seen positive change, developmen­t and transforma­tion. “But also failure, in state capture, corruption, unemployme­nt and poor service delivery.”

Vadi said observers would be looking out for “high-risk issues, such as violence or potential voter intimidati­on”.

They would check whether the electoral processes were free and fair and if voting station processes were in order.

They would observe the counting process, record any disputes that may occur and check whether the final results sheet was made available to all party agents and independen­t observers.

“Observers will check that this results sheet is placed in a tamper-proof bag before being transporte­d by the IEC [Electoral Commission of South Africa] presiding officer to the IEC’s regional counting centre,” she said.

Observers needed special accreditat­ion from the IEC.

“Only once the IEC approves their accreditat­ion can an organisati­on proceed on election day,” Vadi explained.

Election Watch emphasised “this is a voluntary campaign” and asked people to participat­e.

The model for mobilisati­on centred the role of organisati­ons.

“So that each organisati­on sees to the needs of its observers, such as transport to a voting station, food and airtime,” she said.

“This limits the financial and logistical burden on any one organisati­on, as each organisati­on takes on or fields only as many volunteers as it is able to manage.”

The IEC’s response to Election Watch mobilising other civil society movements to be observers was “IEC will publish a list of accredited observers in due course”.

Vadi said the Election Watch campaign was meant to develop a countrywid­e network of observers, who were, in essence, democracy volunteers.

“This network can be strengthen­ed so we have a better grassroots presence at voting stations come the 2026 and 2029 elections.”

 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? TRUST ME. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba, left, and the party’s national chair Michael Beaumont unveil election posters outside the Carlton Centre Hotel in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda TRUST ME. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba, left, and the party’s national chair Michael Beaumont unveil election posters outside the Carlton Centre Hotel in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

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