Harare, Friday. Nearly 305,000 Zimbabwean voters were turned
away and 206,000 received assistance from election officials during last
week’s disputed vote, organisers said on Thursday.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) said
nearly 3.5 million people cast their ballots in the July 31 polls, which
extended President Robert Mugabe’s 33-year rule.
The commission’s statistics show the largest number of voters, 64,483, were turned away in the capital Harare.
Urban areas have long been a stronghold of Mugabe’s rival Morgan Tsvangirai, who claimed the vote was rigged.
Regular voters were reportedly turned away because
their names were missing from the voters’ roll, they were registered in
another ward or they did not have adequate identification.
But independent poll monitors have reported
widespread manipulation of the roll and said the real number of
disenfranchised voters could be much higher.
The Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) said
over 750,000 urban voters were missing from the electoral list, in what
they described as “a systematic effort to disenfranchise an estimated
million voters.” “A total of 99.97 percent of rural voters were
registered while only 67.94 percent of urban voters were registered,”
said Solomon Zwana, chairman of ZESN.
Rights groups say police forced some people they
believed to be opposition supporters to feign illiteracy and seek the
assistance of police officers or polling officials, with their votes
going to Mugabe.
Zimbabwe has the highest literacy rate in Africa.
The country’s former finance minister, Simba
Makoni who defected from Mugabe’s ZANU-PF in 2008, joined those voices
rejecting the outcome.
“We reject the results announced by ZEC as not free, not fair, not credible and not legitimate,” said Makoni.
“These results do not reflect the expression of the free will of the people of Zimbabwe.” (AFP)
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