The Zimbabwe government plans to tighten electoral laws ahead of next year’s parliamentary polls, the state-run Herald newspaper reported Monday.
The proposed amendments to the Electoral Act, which include giving the state control over voter education, are contained in a bill published last week and due to be debated in parliament, the Herald reported.
The announcement comes at a time when the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has threatened to boycott next year’s polls unless certain conditions, including an independent electoral commission, are met.
According to the Herald, the proposed amendments include banning foreign donations towards voter education unless they are made through the state-appointed Electoral Supervisory Commission (ESC).
”The bill allows the minister of justice, legal and parliamentary affairs to assign any person in the employment of the state to perform secretarial and administrative functions for the commission,” the paper added.
According to the Herald the bill also seeks to make political graffiti in public places an offence punishable by a fine or imprisonment of up to five years.
The opposition, which won 57 out of 120 contested seats in parliamentary elections in 2000, claims President Robert Mugabe’s ruling Zanu-PF stole victory from it through violence and intimidation.
It has demanded that more than a dozen conditions be met before it is willing to participate in next year’s elections, including that the poll be held in accordance with standards set for the region, and the repeal of strict press and security laws. – Sapa-AFP