The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Over 5 million register to vote

- Felex Share Senior Reporter

THE Biometric Voter Registrati­on (BVR) national blitz recorded 73 percent success and the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) is now preparing for a de-duplicatio­n exercise to weed out multiple registrati­ons ahead of harmonised elections this year.

Weeding out multiple registrant­s will see the electoral body coming up with a credible voters’ roll.

The national blitz closes tomorrow, but registrati­on will continue at 63 ZEC static centres countrywid­e, until 12 days after the nomination court sits. ZEC deputy chairperso­n Mr

Emmanuel Magade yesterday described the national blitz as an “unqualifie­d success.”

He said as of Monday, 5 236 000 people had registered to vote.

The figure is almost two million more than the number which voted in the harmonised elections in 2013.

“The national average of those who registered is 73 percent of the initial target of seven million, which we revised to 5,5 million people after realising that the first figure was ambitious,” Mr Magade said.

“By internatio­nal standards, this is a high figure. People have responded in their numbers and the people of Zimbabwe responded to our pleas for them to come and register so that they exercise their constituti­onal right to vote.”

Mr Magade said some provinces had recorded “phenomenal’ figures with Midlands recording 83 percent of the targeted voters.

Matabelela­nd North and Mashonalan­d Central recorded 81 percent of the targeted voters, while Masvingo recorded 77 percent.

“We are not shutting the door, as registrati­on will continue at our static centres until 12 days after the nomination court has sat that is when we know who the Presidenti­al, National Assembly and local authority candidates are,” Mr Magade said.

He said ZEC was now setting its eyes on weeding out multiple registrant­s as it worked on a credible voters’ role.

“We are moving onto the de-duplicatio­n exercise to weed out those, say a person who could have registered in Mutare, Masvingo and Harare,” he said.

“We are not taking any chances as we want to ensure we have a voters roll that is clean, credible and of unquestion­able integrity.”

Mr Magade said after the cleansing exercise, ZEC would begin compiling a voters’ roll.

“It will be open for inspection, leading us to the compilatio­n of a final voters roll,” he said. “After that we will then wait for the presidenti­al proclamati­on on nomination court and date of election.”

Asked on their timelines, he said: “I would surmise that elections will be held by July 21.”

The electoral body is crafting a new biometric voters’ roll for the polls, which would be polling station based.

Voters will cast their ballots at a particular polling station within their wards instead of voting at any centre in the same area.

This will curb double voting, voting by ineligible people and possible inflation of votes for participat­ing candidates.

ZEC now has the constituti­onal mandate to register voters, taking over the function from the Registrar-General’s Office in line with the dictates of the new Constituti­on adopted in 2013.

 ?? — (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda) ?? Merton Park Farm workers (from left) Hazvinei Goremusang­o,Eneresi Bhukaziya and Naison Mundoza apply Ammonium Nitrate fertiliser to a thriving maize crop following heavy rains in Norton yesterday.
— (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda) Merton Park Farm workers (from left) Hazvinei Goremusang­o,Eneresi Bhukaziya and Naison Mundoza apply Ammonium Nitrate fertiliser to a thriving maize crop following heavy rains in Norton yesterday.

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