The Herald (Zimbabwe)

NEW VOTER REGISTRATI­ON RULES

- Tendai Mugabe Senior Reporter

THE Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) is crafting a new voters’ roll to replace the existing one and prospectiv­e voters who fail to register in the exercise to be conducted by the commission next year will not be eligible to vote in the 2018 harmonised elections, the commission’s chairperso­n Justice Rita Makarau has said.

The commission said it would draft a new biometric voters’ roll for 2018, which would be polling station based.

After registrati­on using this new technology, a confirmati­on receipt would be issued by ZEC officials.

What this effectivel­y means is that for purposes of voting, names of voters would only appear on a particular polling station.

Speaking during a meeting between ZEC and various political parties at the electoral commission’s offices in Harare yesterday, Justice Makarau said the new voter registrati­on system was likely to start in May next year.

“We are going to come up with a new voters’ roll for 2018,” she said. “The voters’ roll that we are going to use in 2018 will not make any reference to what happened in 2013. Tell all your (political party) members that once ZEC calls for voter registrati­on, we have got to turn up all three million members of our parties. All of them have to turn up for voter registrati­on otherwise they will not be able to vote for our next President, or for you as an MP, or for you as a councillor.

“The reason why is because the old voters’ roll did not capture our biometrics. This new voters’ roll captures our biometrics and is going to be very different to the old voters’ roll. If you registered for 2013, but don’t register for 2018, your picture will not be able to appear on the voters’ roll, and your name will actually not be on the voters’ roll, which is going to be polling station specific.”

Justice Makarau added: “According to our prediction­s now, we are hoping that the procuremen­t will be done by March and April (next year) and thereafter, we should be able to start the voter registrati­on (in) May and June up to the end of 2017 hopefully — have a voters’ roll by then. Those are our projection­s.”

She revealed that preliminar­y work towards polling station based voter registrati­on such as mapping had already com- menced.

Said Justice Makarau: “ZEC has commenced the polling station specific voter registrati­on mapping exercise. That exercise is actually unfolding as we speak, and we hope to complete it by 30 November. People are out in your areas mapping polling areas. Briefly, we have polling stations that have already been establishe­d for past elections. We are saying people are going to be registered to a particular polling station. Your name will only appear at one polling station as a voter, and you must know that polling station. Mapping is mini-demarcatio­n of wards.”

Responding to a question from the floor on whether the mapping exercise was a precursor to delimitati­on of constituen­cies ahead of 2018, Justice Makarau said, “There is not going to be delimitati­on in 2018. Polling station mapping is confined to existing boundaries of wards and constituen­cies.”

Giving a presentati­on on the use of biometric technology, ZEC deputy chief elections officer Mr Utoile Silaigwana, said the technology did not amount to electronic voting and could be used on the voting day.

He said the biometric voter registrati­on technology would only register eligible voters as prescribed by the electoral law.

Mr Silaigwana said the two main characteri­stics of biometric voter registrati­on were the face and the finger prints.

“Biometric voter registrati­on as an option was adopted based on the regional and global experience­s, looking at the long-term merits of biometric technology in ensuring credibilit­y and integrity of the voters roll,” he said.

“It addresses the issues of suspected multiple voting. It increases transparen­cy of the process and enhances accuracy, currency and security among others.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe