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Parliament Blocks Electoral Bill, Demands Changes

Parliament Blocks Electoral Bill, Demands Changes

http://www.voanews.com/

11 July 2012

Ntungamili Nkomo | Washington DC

After passing a controversial human rights law, the Zimbabwe parliament on 
Wednesday rejected the Electoral Bill that precludes the diaspora vote and 
is fraught with loopholes seen as favoring President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu PF 
party.

The House of Assembly blocked the proposed law and ordered Justice Minister 
Patrick Chinamasa to factor in a few changes before bringing it back for 
more debate.

Among other things, MDC legislators objected to a provision which says voter 
registration should be based on a particular polling station. Instead, they 
prefer a system allowing people to vote in any station where they are 
registered.

Chinamasa told parliament that the Electoral Bill does not allow expatriates 
to vote because politicians in his Zanu PF party can not travel to Western 
countries to campaign due to sanctions.

If allowed, Chinamsa said, the diaspora vote would give the MDC an unfair 
advantage. But the proposed law is not all doom. It has its own strenghts, 
one of which is a provision requiring authorities to release election 
results within five days of voting.

This seeks to prevent a repeat of the 2008 situation where it took the 
electoral body a whole month to release results amid deepening public 
anxiety and heightening political tensions.

The law also mandates the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to summon and 
censure parties and candidates over violence, as well as establishing 
special courts to try political violence cases.

On Tuesday, parliament passed the controversial Human Rights Bill which bars 
the newly-introduced Human Rights Commission from probing rights violations 
that occurred before February, 2009.

That means the 2008 election violence and the Gukurahundi killings of the 
1980s that claimed more than 20,000 lives in the Matabeleland and Midlands 
will not be investigated.

Only two legislators, Siyabonga Malandu Ncube of Insiza South and Magwegwe’s 
Felix Magalela Mafa Sibanda – both from Matabaleland, opposed the law.

Malandu Ncube told VOA he was shocked his MDC colleagues backed the law. 
“It’s a big shame,” Ncube said. “Victims of human rights abuses were looking 
up to the MDC to make laws that will give them justice. The dream is now 
gone.”

Zimbabwe Human Rights Association director Okay Machisa also criticized the 
law calling it “unacceptable and shameful.” 

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