Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05DARESSALAAM1090
2005-06-06 04:11:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Dar Es Salaam
Cable title:  

Tanzanian Elections Preparations: Quiet Only

Tags:  PGOV TZ 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 DAR ES SALAAM 001090 

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR AF/E AND INR/AA

E.O. 12958: 6/02/15
TAGS: PGOV TZ
SUBJECT: Tanzanian Elections Preparations: Quiet Only
on the Surface

Classified by Pol-Econ Chief Judy Buelow for reason
1.4(b)

REF: A) Dar es Salaam 1001 B)Dar es Salaam 972,
C) Dar es Salaam 908, D) Dar es Salaam 801

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 DAR ES SALAAM 001090

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR AF/E AND INR/AA

E.O. 12958: 6/02/15
TAGS: PGOV TZ
SUBJECT: Tanzanian Elections Preparations: Quiet Only
on the Surface

Classified by Pol-Econ Chief Judy Buelow for reason
1.4(b)

REF: A) Dar es Salaam 1001 B)Dar es Salaam 972,
C) Dar es Salaam 908, D) Dar es Salaam 801


1. (C) Summary: Tanzania's preparations for elections
have entered an apparent lull, now that voter
registration has ended on both Zanzibar and the
mainland, the official campaign is yet to begin, and
all party candidates have been nominated. Electoral
outcomes on the mainland, where the CCM dominates, are
a foregone conclusion. The elections scene is like
the proverbial duck: appearing to float tranquilly on
the surface of the pond, while paddling frantically
underwater. The National Electoral Commission (NEC)
and the Zanzibar Electoral Commission (ZEC) are now
"scrubbing" their respective voters registers for
errors, oversights and duplicate registrations. This
process presents ample opportunities for tension and
electoral manipulation, especially on Zanzibar, where
the elections will be hotly contested. Meanwhile,
opposition parties fret about unequal access to the
media and the difficulty of obtaining permits to hold
demonstrations on the scale employed by the ruling
CCM. As electoral conflicts continue to roil below
the surface on Zanzibar, the Diplomatic Group is
determined to keep pressing for a democratic
transition in the isles. End Summary.

--------------
Entering Quiet Time
--------------


2. (U) Mid-May marked the beginning of an unofficial
"quiet time" in the run-up to the October elections.
All suspense over the outcome of the national
elections ended on May 4, when the ruling CCM party
nominated its candidates. It's difficult to imagine a
scenario that doesn't result in the election, by
overwhelming majorities, of Foreign Minister Jakaye
Kikwete and Vice President Shein as President and Vice
President, or in an equally overwhelming majority for
the CCM in the National Assembly. The NEC and the ZEC
have now completed voter registration, on the mainland
and on semi-autonomous Zanzibar, respectively. The
establishment of Tanzania's first-ever Permanent
Voters Registries (PVR) is well underway. In the
current phase, the sister electoral commissions are
now scrutinizing their respective PVRs, to eliminate
dual registrations, and adjudicate cases in which
registration was allegedly wrongly granted, or wrongly
denied. The official campaign does not begin until

August 20. Tanzania's annual official "quiet time,"
when the entire government decamps to the capital
Dodoma for Parliament's budget session, begin in early
June. The public might be forgiven for thinking the
electoral campaign has entered a lull.

--------------
Scrubbing Zanzibar's PVR
--------------


3. (U) Nothing is ever as tranquil as it seems,
especially on Zanzibar, where the electoral contest
between the ruling CCM party and the opposition CUF is
close and hotly contested. The outcome of elections
on Zanzibar may ultimately hinge on the integrity of
the ZEC's ongoing effort to "scrub" the PVR. The
ZEC's technicians are now scanning the computer
database for potential dual registrations. As voter
registration was completed in each of Zanzibar's five
regions, the ZEC was obliged to post the preliminary
lists of registered voters, to allow members of the
public to raise objections to any specific name that
does or does not appear on the lists. The ZEC can
adjudicate many of these objections itself, but they
may be appealed up to the High Court. The challenge
for the ZEC (and to a lesser extent the NEC) is to
adjudicate all objections, remove any dual
registrations, and ensure that the PVR is clean and
credible by the time voters go to the polls in
October.


4. (C) The ZEC has its work cut out. Observers from
the election observation NGO "TEMCO," diplomats, and
others saw ample evidence of registration practices
that bordered on the edge of legality, or crossed it.
ZEC Commissioners expect to find double registrations,
especially in those Unguja Island constituencies where
registration rates reached 120 percent or more of the
expected tally. In some areas, numerous ineligible
minors may have registered. Zanzibar's CCM government
appears guilty of the borderline legal practice of
recruiting pro-CCM youth into the local militias and
security forces, then transferring them into marginal
constituencies to register. The law is ambiguous on
this point, saying only that government employees may
register in district "where they are living," without
meeting Zanzibar's stringent residency requirements.
ZEC Elections Director Khamis Ame hinted that the ZEC
might disallow registrations of militia members in
those constituencies that have no camps or military
bases. The ZEC seems less likely to devise an
appropriate response to those Zanzibaris, mostly CUF
supporters originating on Pemba Island, who were
arbitrarily denied both registration and the
opportunity to launch an appeal. (Please see reftel
D.)


5. (C) The ZEC is considering the purchase of
additional software that could compare images in the
PVR database such as fingerprints and photographs. An
internal spat within the ZEC over the terms of the
contract was quickly publicized and politicized.
Waymark, the company that had supplied equipment and
technical support to the PVR, had completed a
feasibility study for the software, which revealed
that, of a sample drawn from the Zanzibar PVR, 6.7
percent of the fingerprints were duplicates. Soon
thereafter, the ZEC IT director Salum challenged
Elections Director Khamis Ame, saying that Waymark had
no contract with Waymark for these additional
services. The dispute hit the press, and that
Waymark's technical consultants were abruptly sent
packing. The British DCM, who is deeply involved in
this project, believes that Salum sought to cherry-
pick the data Waymark could use for cross checking, so
that the new software was not applied to those areas
with most suspected double registrations. The
opposition CUF was also quick to suspect a conspiracy:
CUF's International Affairs Director Jussa Ladhu said
that Zanzibar government officials were afraid the new
software would uncover CCM machinations to manipulate
the PVR, and so had pressured the ZEC to not to adopt
of the software. Contract negotiations between the
ZEC and Waymark have now resumed.


6. (C) The opposition CUF party clearly believes that
integrity of the PVR is crucial to the ultimate
credibility of the elections. The CUF party claims it
has evidence that shehas in the Urban West Region
turned away 9,000 people away from the registration
centers, without allowing them to complete the
paperwork necessary to launch an appeal. CUF is
compiling data on these cases, and plans to take them
to court. The ZEC Vice Chairman Augustin Ramadhani
noted, however that it would be difficult make a case
for registration, absent the all-important "form 2-d"
documenting the original denial. The CUF is also
monitoring the appeals process on Unguja Island, where
the ZEC has yet to post the preliminary registration
lists, according to Jussa. When asked what measures
the ZEC could take to reassure the CUF of integrity of
the PVR, Jussa said that the ZEC should immediately
post the lists for Unguja Island, and also purchase
the additional image recognition software from
Waymark.

--------------
Searching for a Level Playing Field
--------------


7. (U) Public attention nationwide has now turned to
the debate over the campaign playing field, which is
decidedly not level. While the media on the mainland
is lively and varied, some newspapers and broadcast
media are controlled or influenced by the government
or the CCM party. On Zanzibar, the few newspapers are
also mouthpieces for the CCM. In Tanzanian campaigns,
personal contact between candidate and the people is
crucial, and massive rallies are an essential part of
any campaign. The official campaign does not begin
until August 20, when all party nominees are
officially announced. Perhaps for this reason,
opposition has found it difficult to obtain permits to
hold rallies. CUF's Jussa told poloff May 16 that the
CUF had been refused all requests to hold rallies on
Zanzibar during the previous month.


8. (U) The ruling CCM party, in the meantime, has been
using considerable government and party resources to
"introduce" Presidential candidate Kikwete to the
people. Since his May 4 nomination, Jakaye Kikwete
has starred at massive rallies in Dodoma, in Dar es
Salaam and in Zanzibar's state-owned Amani stadium,
all of them lavishly covered in the press. Opposition
parties protested this state of affairs, especially
after CUF's request to use Amani was turned down.
Even some government officials have questioned the
imbalance. The Registrar of Political Parties, John
Tendwa, publicly called on the CCM to halt its
"premature campaigning." Minister of Home Affairs
Omar Mapuri, acting in his capacity as CCM Publicity
Secretary, just as publicly responded that as

SIPDIS
Registrar, Tendwa controlled the registration and
subsequent conduct of the political parties, but he
had no authority over the conduct of election
campaigns. Barely two weeks after this exchange,
press accounts reported that Kikwete greeted
"thousands" of well wishers in Mwanza and raised about
250,000 USDOLS for the CCM at a May 28 fundraiser.

--------------
Keeping the Diplomatic Group Involved
--------------


9. (C) The US Mission continues to work with the
Diplomatic Group, representing mostly western donor
countries that have been providing electoral
assistance to Zanzibar. Throughout the current lull
in elections preparations, the diplomatic group will
continue to press for a credible and peaceful
democratic transition on Zanzibar, the major testing
ground for Tanzanian democracy. The Heads of
Diplomatic Mission last met on May 18, where they
agreed on an updated version of the common message
which they will transmit in their meetings with
Tanzania's government and party leaders. The updated,
six-point message follows:

-- We speak as friends of Tanzania, and of Zanzibar.
We are impartial, and back neither the CCM nor the CUF
in the coming elections.

-- A peaceful and credible election is fundamental to
Zanzibar's economic and developmental success.

-- A transparent and comprehensive PVR is essential to
a credible election.

-- A violent or disputed election will have adverse
consequences for trade, investment and tourism on
Zanzibar and on the mainland.

-- It is therefore vital for all parties to speak and
act with restraint at this sensitive time.

-- Ask if the CCM and the CUF are exploring
sustainable power sharing, as suggested in the Muafaka
process.


10. (C) Comment: It will take continued effort from
the Diplomatic Group to identify and support those
individuals and institutions that are still determined
to conduct credible elections. President Mkapa's
recent stance suggests that he is now more interested
in promoting the CCM than in ensuring a democratic
transition on troubled Zanzibar. The recent dispute
in the ZEC may indicate that at least some individuals
in the Commission have lost interest in adopting
rigorous measures to guarantee the PVR's credibility.
Omar Mapuri's dispute with Party Registrar Tendwa is
also discouraging. Mapuri is a Zanzibari who wears
many hats, including that of the ranking CCM
representative who helped negotiate and implement
Zanzibar's bipartisan Muafaka Accord. In his capacity
as Minister of Home Affairs, Mapuri advocated an even-
handed approach to maintaining law and order during
early conflicts over voter registration. Diplomats in
Dar have long considered Mapuri to be potentially one
of their strongest allies in the CCM in support of a
credible, democratic transition on Zanzibar. They
now may have to look elsewhere. Et tu, Omar? End
comment.

OWEN