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DAR ES SALAAM, Aug. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Tanzania's main opposition party, the
Civic United Front (CUF), has asked the United Nations secretary-general to
intervene in the country's general elections slated for next year, local press
reported Thursday.
Eight CUF parliamentarians led by their leader in the parliament, Wilfred Lwakatare, on
Wednesday delivered a letter to Dar es Salaam-based United Nations Development
Program office. Theletter is to be forwarded to Kofi Annan, local newspaper The
Guardian said.
The CUF letter asked the UN secretary-general to intervene in the election
process especially in Zanzibar to ensure that elections are held in a free and
fair environment.
The letter also complained about delays of reforms agreed upon in 2001
between CUF and the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (party of the revolutionary).
The reforms should have been implemented in such fields as jurisdiction,
police, other state organs, publicly-owned media institutions, and the Zanzibar
Electoral Commission, the letter was quoted as saying.
The letter cited as an example of such delays the postponement of voters
registration on Zanzibar. The registration, to be part of Tanzania's Permanent
National Voters Register scheme, has been postponed from now to two months later
due to renovation works of the Zanzibar Electoral Commission's offices on the
Indian Ocean island.
Multiparty politics was introduced in the country in 1992 whileone-party
rule ended in 1995 with the country's first general elections in which the Chama
Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) won 85 percent of the ballots. CCM won again in the 2000
general elections among a dozen political groups.
Zanzibar, an Indian Ocean archipelago, joins Tanganyika on April 26, 1964
to form the United Republic of Tanzania. The island elects its own president and
legislature. Enditem |