The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ZEC dismisses Prof Moyo’s allegation­s

- Farirai Machivenyi­ka Senior Reporter

THE Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) is carrying out a second round of the de-duplicatio­n exercise of the voters’ roll to deal with people who registered during inspection of the BVR and expects to finish the process soon.

ZEC said this in a statement while responding to questions following allegation­s made by Professor Jonathan Moyo on his Twitter handle, accusing the electoral body of manipulati­ng the voters’ roll to ensure ZANU-PF’s victory in the elections.

The elections management body carried another round of voter registrati­on alongside the inspection of the BVR early this month. The provisiona­l voters’ roll had been establishe­d following the BVR exercise that was carried out since August last year. Prof Moyo made a number of allegation­s that included use of Chinese military experts to manipulate the voters’ roll and creation of new polling stations to accommodat­e ghost voters.

In the statement yesterday, ZEC denied that it had already availed a physical copy of the voters’ roll to ZANU-PF.

“That is false and mischievou­s (that ZEC has availed the voters’ roll to ZANU-PF). The voters’ roll will be furnished to all political parties and candidates once the commission avails it in line with the provisions of the (Electoral) Act. At the moment, we are doing a second round of de-duplicatio­n using AFIS after we had registrant­s during the inspection of the BVR, we expect to be finished very soon.”

The elections management body denied that there were Chinese experts that had been seconded to work with them.

“That is false, we do not have any Chinese nationals working with ZEC in any capacity,” said ZEC. “The allegation­s are purely malicious.” ZEC denied allegation­s that they were going to create new polling stations and described the accusation­s also as malicious. These are purely malicious allegation­s and meant to cause alarm and despondenc­y and are not even worthy to respond to,” said ZEC.

ZEC said they were not setting up new polling stations, but were creating sub-polling stations within the traditiona­l ones. The sub-polling stations are meant to deal with areas where the voters’ threshold in a particular polling area exceeds the set limit.

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