Zimbabwe Top court rejects bid to delay elections

Post By Diaspoint | May 11, 2023

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party wanted a delimitation report declared invalid in a bid to delay elections until new voting boundaries had been reviewed.

Zimbabwe will go ahead and hold presidential and legislative elections between July and August, the country’s Constitutional Court ruled.

Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), had sought to have the elections delayed by having the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission’s (ZEC) delimitation report nullified.

What is delimitation?

Delimitation is a process during which the country is divided into constituencies and wards for election purposes.

When delimitation is unbalanced to favor a particular party, it is known as “gerrymandering” which can be used to manipulate election results.

The MDC was particularly concerned about the delimitation report released in February, which it said drew the electoral boundaries and precincts in a way that favored Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU-PF party.

The opposition party took their concerns to the country’s Constitutional Court, which rejected their application on the grounds that the MDC could not prove how fundamental rights were being violated and how the delimitation of constituencies affected those rights.

But the party’s president, Douglas Mwonzora, told reporters that the court dismissed the application because it does not hold jurisdiction, and that the Constitutional Court had “made a political judgement.”

‘Country a laughingstock’

“It is an unfair judgement and we don’t accept that judgement. The matter is not stopping here. We are going to continue with our struggle for democracy. We want free and fair elections in Zimbabwe. And there can never be free and fair elections where the delimitation report is so fundamentally flawed,” Mwonzora told DW. “This is a recipe for disaster for country. It makes our country a laughingstock.”

The MDC was represented by Lovemore Madhuku, a law professor and constitutional lawyer.

“Our clients are very clear they want the delimitation report attended to by a court and a declaration of invalidity made and for that reason they then have to go to the High Court,” Madhuku said.

“So, if they want to fight legally, they will have to go to a court that will issue a declaration of invalidity.”

The ZEC is yet to respond to a request for comment from DW.

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