The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Zec leans on Parly for electoral reforms

- Lincoln Towindo Mr Silaigwana

THE Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) has petitioned Parliament to expedite the amendment of laws to delink the national census from the delimitati­on exercise in order to guarantee smooth general elections in 2023.

There are also other far-reaching proposed legislativ­e changes that are designed to ensure incident-free polls.

A delimitati­on exercise is a process through which constituen­cy boundaries are marked. By law, the elections management body is required to draw up new electoral boundaries every ten years, immediatel­y after a national population census.

The next census is due in 2022.

The Commission opines that it cannot seamlessly roll out a delimitati­on exercise after the population census as electoral boundaries need to be drawn at least six months before the plebiscite.

Zec chief elections officer Mr Utoile Silaigwana told The Sunday Mail that they had approached Parliament to push for a Constituti­onal amendment for the envisaged changes.

“In terms of the Constituti­on, the delimitati­on exercise must be done after the census, which happens after every 10 years,” explained Mr Silaigwana.

“As it stands, the census is supposed to be done in 2022, with the delimitati­on exercise coming in 2023.

“The period between the census, whose outcome could be released towards the end of 2022 or early 2023, leaves Zec with no time to do delimitati­on.

“We realised that when the Constituti­on was drafted, there could have been an oversight by our legislatur­e,” he said.

Clerk of Parliament Mr Kennedy Chouda said they will take appropriat­e action once they have been formally approached by Zec.

“Zec has made a presentati­on on the need to delink the two (census and delimitati­on), but they are yet to approach us formally. We are waiting for that,” he said.

Zec has also submitted a slew of other recommende­d legislativ­e changes.

Some of the proposals, which stem from the 2018 harmonised elections, include the need to refine regulation­s that govern the withdrawal of candidatur­e for both National Assembly and Local Authority elections.

Zec’s recommenda­tions also read in part: “Unlike in the Presidenti­al election, the withdrawal of candidatur­e for the National Assembly and Local Authority elections was not regulated with regards to the period within which it can be done.

“Some candidates withdrew their candidatur­e late into the election period, thereby affecting the ballot paper design and printing by the Commission, especially for the postal vote.

“The major challenge for the Commission is that the law imposes certain obligation­s such as bringing the withdrawal of a candidate to the attention of voters and ensuring that the name of the withdrawn candidate is omitted or deleted from all ballot papers before the election.”

Under the current laws, Presidenti­al election candidates can only withdraw 21 days before the election.

Zec also wants Government to separate funding for elections from the Commission’s operationa­l budget.

“It is recommende­d that funding of elections should be taken as a process, not an event.

“For example, capitalisa­tion of the Commission, in terms of vehicles, office accommodat­ion and other equipment, could have been separated from the funding of the actual election activity to avoid huge financial requiremen­ts at the same time,”says Zec.

Further, it is also pushing for a law that stops media houses from endorsing candidates.

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