The intensive voter registration exercise entered its second day
yesterday, but it was marred by cases of people being turned away for
failure to produce proof of residence and other documentation.
In separate interviews with Southern Eye during the voter
registration exercise at Moray and Milton Junior primary schools, the
disgruntled residents said there was no difference between the present
voter registration exercise and the previous mobile one that ended last
month.
“There is no difference because we are still being required to
produce proof of residence for us to register,” Ndabezinhle Ndlovu said
at Milton Junior School. “We did not have that kind of requirement
during the referendum, so why must we be bothered now at voter
registration.”
He said the proof of residence requirement was a barrier hindering
most citizens, particularly the youth, from voting in the forthcoming
elections.
A 19-year-old resident, Nhlanhla Moyo, said he had been turned away because he failed to produce proof of residence.
“I did not register today because I did not bring proof of
residence,” he said. “I thought this time around the requirement had
been relaxed, that is why I did not bother to bring it.”
Moyo said it was disheartening that he had failed to register
yesterday after he had again failed to get that chance during the last
voter registration exercise.
Samson Muchemwa at Moray Primary said they were told by the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission officials that the proof of residence was required
and he was lucky that he had brought it just in case, and he
successfully registered.
The government recently announced that it was waving the proof of
residence requirement and had instead introduced affidavits which
prospective voters could use.
A disgruntled Donald Ncube, at Milton Junior, said he had faced a challenge in checking if his name was in the voters’ roll.
“I brought a driver’s licence, but was turned away as they wanted a
passport or a national identity card,” Ncube said. “That requirement is
unfair considering that the driver’s licence was enough proof that I was
Donald Ncube, a Zimbabwean citizen.”
Ncube said he was disturbed that he could not even verify that his name was in the voter’s roll because of the requirement.
http://www.southerneye.co.zw/2013/06/12/voter-registration-gives-residents-headaches/
No comments:
Post a Comment