The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt blasts meddling UK

- Tendai Mugabe Senior Reporter

GOVERNMENT has said Britain has no business in Zimbabwe’s internal elections and has no right to prescribe how the country should run its elections.

Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Services Secretary Mr George Charamba said any interferen­ce by the British administra­tion in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs would be resisted.

Mr Charamba said Zimbabwe was a sovereign State and in no way should it pander to the whims and caprices of the British regime.

His remarks come in the wake of some reckless and unsubstant­iated claims by the British Ambassador to Zimbabwe Ms Catriona Laing recently that the takeover of the procuremen­t of Biometric Voter Registrati­on (BVR) kits by Government might compromise the credibilit­y of next year’s elections.

Ms Laing preferred a situation where the Government of Zimbabwe surrendere­d the procuremen­t of the BVR kits to the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP).

Mr Charamba queried why the British were interested in how the kits were being procured, yet they were not showing the same enthusiasm on how the country was procuring grain for drought relief.

“What is so special about those voting kits,” asked Mr Charamba. “Why didn’t they meddle on how we procure grain for drought relief? What is she trying to say? We hope the Conservati­ve government, which she represents, is not copying wrong things from the discredite­d (Tony) Blair government.

“If they made that mistake they will discover the resistance to that will just be stout. We are not a British colony and voting is a sovereign right.”

Mr Charamba added: “The British had elections a few years ago and more recently they had a referendum on whether to stay or get out of the European Union. Were the kits bought by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme?”

Although the British are not a stakeholde­r in Zimbabwe’s elections, Ms Laing said the Government of Zimbabwe should cite the type of material it wanted to purchase.

She said Britain was “concerned” on the transparen­cy of the process, without

elaboratin­g where the concern was coming from.

“There are a number of conditions and recommenda­tions that the African Union and Sadc made that need to be in place in order for all of us to have confidence that the elections, when they happen, will be free and fair,” she said.

“One of the issues we are concerned about is around the change of the procuremen­t process around BVR. We wait to see how this is going to pan out.”

Government recently said it was now going to play a leading role in the procuremen­t of the BVR kits instead of leaving the entire process to the UNDP.

There are a number of issues that led to that developmen­t, including a plot by Western government­s to use the involvemen­t of the UNDP to influence the outcome of Zimbabwe’s elections.

If things failed to go their way, they might cause instabilit­y in the country

like what they did in Ivory Coast during the tenure of President Laurent Gbagbo, observers said.

Analysts say elections were an internal process that should not be left in the hands of foreign institutio­ns or Government­s.

They said it was interestin­g to explore why the opposition and Western government­s were keen to involve UNDP in a purely internal and sovereign process such as elections.

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