Zimbabwe early voting queried

Zimbabwean Prime Minister and leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Morgan Tsvangirai.

Zimbabwean Prime Minister and leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Morgan Tsvangirai.

Published Jul 16, 2013

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Harare - The Zimbabwe prime minister's party said Tuesday it had lost faith in the country's electoral commission after “chaotic and disorganised” special voting for security forces ahead of key polls.

Long queues and the late delivery of ballot papers marked the two-day early vote, which started Sunday for police officers and soldiers who will be on duty on July 31 when the rest of the country votes.

Many security force agents found themselves unable to vote, drawing condemnation from Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

“The process is chaotic and disorganised and has exposed ZEC (Zimbabwe Electoral Commission) as a body not ready to the task,” MDC secretary general Tendai Biti told a news conference.

In just over a fortnight, presidential and parliamentary polls pit incumbent President Robert Mugabe against his archrival Tsvangirai, 61.

Mugabe, 89, hopes to extend his 33-year-rule in the vote that will end the pair's unity government formed after deadly disputed polls in 2008.

On Tuesday, police officers waited at the city hall in the capital Harare, hoping to cast their votes even though polls closed Monday night.

Presiding officers had been deployed late at most polling stations and MDC polling agents were chased away in eastern province Manicaland, said Biti.

“It's a clear breach of the laws of Zimbabwe,” Biti added.

“We are really worried with (the) ZEC and have lost institutional trust in them. The junta has taken over and ZEC is no longer in charge.”

The MDC in the past has complained that former security force members - traditionally loyal to Mugabe - served on the ZEC.

The commission's former head, George Chiweshe, used to be a brigadier general in the army.

Reports of rights abuses and intimidation of political opponents have implicated the security forces, which fall under Mugabe's control. - Sapa-AFP

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