press release
SOURCE : Transparency International
7 August 2013
Berlin — Recent elections in Cambodia and
Zimbabwe highlight an important aspect of representational democracy:
the influence of leaders who have been in power for many years who can
use their resources to favour their own candidates and parties. In both
countries opposition parties and national and international observers
reported that electoral lists had been rigged and manipulated.
Zimbabweans went to the polls on 31 July to vote for a new president
and parliament amid claims that the election could not be free and fair
because the voting lists contained people who were dead, extremely old
or duplicate names. On 28 July Cambodians went to the polls to find many
people were not on the list
although they voted in the previous elections, including the local
election held last year; others found multiple names on the voter lists
while many were given temporary voter cards by the local authorities and
others appeared to have voted twice.
Neither election was blighted by violence or widespread intimidation
at polling stations. Although that is to be welcomed, it should not be
used as a reason for the people to herald these elections as fair.
In Zimbabwe the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party, led
by presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai, condemned the elections.
The African Union representatives monitoring the poll said it wanted
more time to review the process but also that the incidents reported did
not put "the elections in jeopardy."
In Cambodia the opposition also rejected the election. Transparency
International Cambodia, which monitored the election and documented
systematic and widespread irregularities, called for an independent
investigation. This has not been agreed to yet and is being discussed by
the disputed parties and the National Election Committee (NEC).
RESOLVING DIFFERENT OPINIONS
Transparency International condemns the incidences of fraud and
vote-rigging and calls on the election committees to review the evidence
in both countries. So far this is not being discussed in Zimbabwe. In
hotly contested elections that have far reaching effects on the people
of a country, it is imperative that the results represent the will of
the people.
The fact that the election in Zimbabwe took place before the voting
lists could be fully verified will make this a difficult task. In the
coming days, the government, the international observers and the members
of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network must work together to deliver a
result that has the public's confidence. If this means re-running
certain polls because the voter lists are flawed then this must be done.
In Cambodia if an independent investigation is undertaken, it can
stop the protests that opposition parties have called for at the end of
the month.
In Cambodia and Zimbabwe the ruling parties have been in power for
decades: 28 years in Cambodia and 33 in Zimbabwe. They not only control
the election process but the key institutions, such as the courts. This
makes it even harder for opposition candidates to mount challenges to
those that have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo.
SOURCE : Transparency International
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