NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘Zec inconsiste­nt on law applicatio­n’

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA Follow Miriam on Twitter @FloMangway­a

AREPORT by the Citizen in Action Southern Africa (CIASA) has shown that Zimbabwean­s are increasing­ly losing confidence in the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) over its management of electoral processes.

The report titled Capturing the Judiciary: Reality or Phantom, which was released last Friday, said Zec has been selectivel­y applying its powers, which has resulted in the public doubting its capacity to produce indisputab­le polls.

In the report, CIASA analyses the recent ruling by the High Court, which reversed a ruling on the cancellati­on of constituen­cy vacancies made by the same court and saw Zec setting a new date for nomination­s for six vacant seats in Harare East, Mbizo, Kambuzuma, Nkulumane, Pumula and Mutasa South.

The seats fell vacant after the recall of People’s Democratic Party (PDP) members Tendai Biti (Harare East), Settlement Chikwinya (Mbizo), Willias Madzimure (Kambuzuma), Kucaca Phulu (Nkulumane), Sichelesil­e Mahlangu (Pumula) and Regai Tsunga (Mutasa South) by the said party.

“The case on Zec’s independen­ce is largely built on the basis that they require the Justice minister (Ziyambi Ziyambi) to approve or facilitate their law-making function, without which they cannot directly interface with the Parliament of Zimbabwe for law-making purposes,” CIASA said in the report.

“In a statement announcing the cancellati­on of nomination courts seating for the six PDP constituen­cies, Zec chief elections officer Utloile Silaigwana, stated that: ‘The proclamati­on calling for by-elections issued by the President in terms of Statutory Instrument 1 of 2022 on January 6, 2022 is accordingl­y amended.’

“This by all means confirms the longheld suspicion that Zec’s insistence on limited law-making functions is, therefore, selectivel­y applied. This is concretise­d by the fact that a day later, after another court ruling, Zec turned around and said it needed to check the legal feasibilit­y of reopening nomination court which they did neverthele­ss.”

CIASA said political players and the general public had lost confidence in Zec’s capacity to deliver free, fair and credible elections since the disputed 2018 elections.

As the country is geared towards the March 26 by-elections and the 2023 polls, there is increased demand among civic society and political parties for Zec to be more transparen­t in handling electoral processes.

“Trust in Zec depends on how open the electoral body is to the public,” Zimbabwe Election Support Network chairperso­n Andrew Makoni said.

“The more open Zec becomes, the more it gains public trust. Zec, therefore, should strive to improve its accountabi­lity and transparen­cy on its functions to regain public confidence in its operations. It must be willing to understand from the public itself why it is losing confidence in it, for it to be able to address their concerns.”

Election Resource Centre legal and advocacy officer Takunda Tsunga said: “The loss of public confidence in the electoral commission and election management is a sign of the breakdown in the citizensta­te relationsh­ip. This is a result of the disputed 2018 harmonised elections and failure to address the issues that brought about those disputes including implementa­tion of necessary reforms to boost confidence.”

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