Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Zec announces provisiona­l elections roadmap

- Nqobile Tshili Chronicle Correspond­ent

THE Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) yesterday announced its provisiona­l elections roadmap with President Emmerson Mnangagwa expected to proclaim an election date between April 28 and June 1.

According to the road map, the Nomination Court is expected to sit between May 19 and June 21.

In a statement, Zec said elections would be held between July 21 and August 21. It said the provisiona­l voters’ roll would be produced within 30 days.

“Proclamati­on of election date (prerogativ­e of the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe as guided by the Constituti­on) earliest date 28 April while latest date is June 1. Sitting of Nomination Court earliest date is May 19 while the latest date is June 21,” reads the Zec statement.

The roadmap also entails training of electoral officers, media monitoring of coverage of political parties and candidates as well as setting up of polling stations.

Zec commission­er, Dr Qhubani Moyo, said by providing the elections road map the electoral body was showing its preparedne­ss to hold credible elections.

“The road map that Zec has created indicates that the commission is now putting sign posts for the public and citizens to be able to know the developmen­ts and stages that we are in preparatio­n for the elections. It also shows that we are now advanced in terms of preparedne­ss for the elections that are coming anytime between July and August,” said Dr Moyo.

He urged interested parties to prepare for the elections. “Civil society organisati­ons should amplify their voter education awareness campaigns. Political parties should also begin to ensure that they are in a preparator­y mode so that they are not caught flat-footed,” Dr Moyo said.

“As for the citizenry they should be gearing themselves for the crucial stage of voter registrati­on which is voter inspection. They should come and check whether their names are registered under the polling stations of their choice and check whether their names have been spelt correctly.”

Meanwhile, according to our Harare Bureau, Zec has proposed a number of amendments to the Electoral Act that will be tabled before Parliament when it resumes debate on the Electoral Amendment Bill next week. The Bill is currently before Parliament and is at the Second Reading stage. Zec chairperso­n, Justice Priscilla Chigumba, revealed the pending amendments to the Electoral Act while she was addressing diplomats accredited to Zimbabwe yesterday.

She said the proposed amendments emanated from the need to align issues on voter registrati­on with the constituti­on and issues that have been brought about by the bio-metric voter registrati­on process. “Some of the issues are the amendment of section 22A of the Electoral Act to allow Zec to establish more polling stations in an area that has a large voter population,” she said. “In our view, this will speed up polling on the actual voting day.”

Justice Chigumba said Zec wanted the law to close voter registrati­on when proclamati­on of elections is made by the President.

“The other amendment is 26A of the Electoral Act on the closure of the voters’ roll so that the voters’ roll is closed on the proclamati­on day as opposed to the 12 days after nomination day,” he said. “This will allow the Commission to finalise the voters’ roll in readiness for nomination day.

“We propose amendments of Section 49 of the Electoral Act on the withdrawal of candidates to provide a cut off time when a candidate can withdraw his or her candidacy.

“Late withdrawal­s have a logistic and financial impact for the Commission as the law mandates the Commission to delete from the ballot paper the name of any candidate who withdraws when such withdrawal has been made after the ballot paper has already been printed.”

Justice Chigumba said they wanted section 59 of the Electoral Act on assisted voters to be amended to allow visually impaired voters to be assisted by a person of their choice without the presiding officer necessaril­y being present. She reiterated Zec’s commitment to holding peaceful, free and credible elections, adding multi-party liaison committees would be set up for dispute resolution.

“On conflict management and in line with the provisions of our law, the commission will set up multi-party liaison committees in the various committees and wards,” said Justice Chigumba. A national multi-party liaison committee will also be set up for the Presidenti­al election. The purpose of these committees is to deal with disputes that may arise during the electoral process. Zec’s clarion call had been to discourage politicall­y motivated violence and encourage tolerance and respect for the diverse views of the country.”

Latest statistics from Zec show that 54,5 percent of all registered voters are women, with Harare recording the highest percentage of registrant­s at 14,4 percent of the total followed by Midlands with 13,8 percent, Manicaland 12,6 percent, Mashonalan­d West 11,6 percent, Masvingo 10,4 percent, Mashonalan­d East 10,2 percent and Matabelela­nd North 6,2 percent.

The lowest proportion of registered voters were in with Bulawayo with 4,1 percent of the total, followed by Matabelela­nd South with 4,8 percent.

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