How many people will be able to vote?
Two years ago Dr Frederik van Zyl
Slabbert, then co-chairman
of the local government election task group, warned that plans for the
country’s 1999 national election were running a year behind schedule
and would probably be held without a proper voters’ roll. “We came
through the last elections on euphoria, but we are not going to manage
this a second time round,” he said. “In the founding election in 1994,
the world was interested in who was elected and in this election they
will want to know how a government is elected.” (Sunday Independent,
February 23, 1997).
His words were prescient. With planning begun too late and without
adequate financial support; with crucial disagreements hanging over
registration numbers and ownership of different ID documents and with
opposition party legal challenges threatening lengthy court cases, the
organisation and legitimacy of this year’s election is on the line. It
should be held within 90 days of April 28 and the President’s office
has indicated that the date will fall between May 18 and May 27.
The acrimony unleashed by the high-profile resignation of Independent
Electoral Commission chairman Judge Johann Kriegler on January 26
suggests that the magnitude of the crisis may at last be dawning. The
government appears rattled. The intemperate reply by Deputy President
Thabo Mbeki to Kriegler’s resignation letter was followed by a
gratuitous personal attack by constitutional affairs minister Mohammed
Valli Moosa. The normally rational and courteous Moosa accused the
judge of not having questioned the old apartheid order but having the
temerity to question the post-apartheid government. “The man’s
hypocrisy leaves a bitter taste in my mouth,” he said. This was so
unmerited it actually brought George Bizos, a senior member of the
legal fraternity and a man known for his strongly pro-ANC views, to
Kriegler’s defence. Moosa played the race card too: whites had not
applied for bar-coded IDs, he said because they “don’t want to be part
of the new South Africa” — though he did not make the same deductions
about blacks who had not applied.
Acting in apparent tandem with Moosa, Essop Pahad, minister without
portfolio in Mbeki’s office, advanced the specious argument that whites
had had ten years to apply for bar-coded IDs. He conveniently failed to
mention that IDs without bar-codes are legally acceptable and that the
decision to base the elections on bar-coded IDs was made as late as
August last year.
Until recently the debate about the forthcoming election centred on
what might seem to some an arcane dispute over the possession of these
bar-coded IDs without which it will be impossible to vote. This is the
issue that has prompted both the New National Party and the Democratic
Party separately to challenge the the Electoral Act in the High Court.
However, particularly since the second round of registration at the end
of January, the spotlight is also turning on registration figures and
the numbers without any ID documents at all.
It was that latter issue that triggered a baleful vision in Kriegler’s
mind last July. He had just read the Human Sciences Reasearch Council
report of a survey commissioned by the IEC to establish how many
potentially eligible voters were in possession of bar-coded identity
documents and, as important, how many did not have them. It showed that
one in ten of South Africans of voting age did not have any form of ID,
a ratio that translated to between 2.5 and 2.8 million voters,
depending on the exact size of the electorate — estimated to be 25
million people. The vast majority of those without any form of ID were
black first-time voters aged 17 to 21 living in rural areas. In his
mind, Kriegler foresaw “The ominous spectre of tens of thousands of
black youths arriving at voting stations on election day and demanding
to exercise their democratic rights but having to be turned away.”
Depriving them of the vote — for that is what turning them away amounts
to — has “grave implications for the safety, security and integrity” of
the pending election. It is not difficult to complete the scene:
polling stations under attack, police intervention, shots, bloodshed,
death and the inevitable world reaction.
The HSRC survey also found that between 2.8 and 3.1 million voters had
identity books of various kinds but without bar-codes. “Taken together
the results suggest that between 5.3 and 5.9 million people do not have
a green bar-coded ID,” the research council concluded. Faced with these
figures, the IEC decided to reverse its original decision that the
compilation of a voters’ roll and organisation of the election should
be based on possession of a bar-coded ID. As Kriegler explained in his
affidavit to the High Court considering the NNP challenge, “Prudence
dictated abandonment of the bar-coded identity document
requirement.”
Although he persuaded the relevant parliamentary portfolio committee
to recognise all IDs as valid for the election, so that the department
of home affairs could concentrate on issuing bar-coded IDs to those
without any form of identity document, he failed to convince the ANC
leadership.
At its national executive meeting on August 14 and 15, the ANC
reaffirmed the decision to make bar-coded IDs the only acceptable
document for voting purposes. (A temporary registration certificate,
indicating that the holder had applied for a bar-coded ID, was later
recognised as an acceptable document for registration as a
voter.)
Both the DP and the NNP suspect that the ANC took that decision
because, having had sight of the HSRC figures, it calculated that it
would benefit politically. The survey showed that about 10 per cent of
the population did not have green bar-coded IDs, the vast majority of
whom were in possession of IDs issued by the South African government
before 1986, the date at which IDs (with bar-codes) were first issued
to blacks. For historical reasons — mainly the attempt to deny blacks
citizenship — those with some form of ID but without bar-coded IDs were
drawn almost exclusively from the white, coloured and Indian minority
communities.
A senior ANC MP who is close to Mbeki denies that the decision
emanated from the organisation’s election strategists. He states that
it came mainly from health minister Nkosazana Zuma and welfare minister
Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, who wanted to use bar-coded IDs for
computerised payment of social service grants, a procedure which would
go a long way to eliminate payments to fraudulent claimants.
Later surveys have confirmed the HSRC’s finding. Opinion ’99 — in
which the ANC-leaning SABC participated — showed that a higher
proportion of blacks (82 per cent) had bar-coded IDs than Indians (72
per cent), Coloureds (67 per cent) and whites (65 per cent). As a party
whose constituency is overwhelmingly black, the ANC would benefit if
possession of the bar-coded ID were required for voting. When broken
down by party support Opinion ’99 figures show that to be the case: 82
per cent of ANC supporters had bar-coded IDs compared with 71 per cent
for the NP and 65 per cent for the DP. Similar figures emerged from a
survey conducted by MarkData.
But if the vast majority of people without any form of ID are young
blacks the ANC could hardly benefit by making bar-codes compulsory for
voting. Three independent surveys have produced very similar figures,
so why should the ANC ignore them? The answer seems to lie with the
department of home affairs and in particular its director-general
Albert Mokoena. He flatly rejects the HSRC finding that as many as 2.8
million mainly young blacks do not have any form of ID. Mokoena
believes that a “substantial number” of young people between 17 and 21
have to be in possession of IDs because they need them for registering
as matric candidates, applying for bursaries, entering tertiary
education institutions and fulfilling miscellaneous socioeconomic needs
such as opening bank accounts. Kriegler counters: “The people in
question are predominantly rural, uneducated and seriously
disadvantaged youngsters to whom the opening of a bank account,
applying for tertiary education or even securing formal employment are
not even remote possibilities.”
If Mokoena is correct in assuming that young blacks have IDs because
they require them for a miscellany of socioeconomic reasons, then those
IDs will be bar-coded ones since these are the only IDs issued by home
affairs at present. If the ANC accepts Mokoena’s argument it would not
be shooting itself in the foot by insisting on bar-coded IDs. But there
is no evidence to prove or disprove that self-interest and realpolitik
prompted the ANC decision. In that evidential vacuum suspicion thrives
in opposition minds. Mbeki labels it — and similar scepticism about the
ANC’s commitment to the principles of multiparty democracy —
“self-induced prejudice”.
Two incidents challenge, if not contradict Mokoena’s confidence.
During the second IEC registration drive on January 29, 30 and 31,
Brigalia Bam, who served as Kriegler’s deputy, witnessed would-be
voters being turned away from registration points in the Eastern Cape
because they did not have the requisite documents. Then on February 6,
the deputy president addressed a crowd at Lusikisiki in the same
province. According to the Sunday Times when Mbeki mentioned problems
with getting new IDs, his audience shouted “azikho” which means “they
are not there”.
Mokoena is equally adamant that his department can meet the shortfall
in bar-coded IDs, even if, hypothetically, it is as high as five
million. In fact he thinks the figure is much lower. He says in his
affidavit to the High Court considering the NNP case: “From the records
of the department, there are approximately 1.6 million people who do
not have the green bar-coded IDs.” and cites the Population Register as
his source. To this Kriegler ripostes: “I do not understand how the
National Population Register which ex hypothesi contains the details of
those who are registered can indicate how many people are not
registered.”
Mokoena is convinced that the problem is a manageable one. But
Kriegler states that it takes the department two months to process an
application for a bar-coded ID, and he remains sceptical: “The two
month estimate refers not to the delivery to aspirant voters of new
identity documents but to the production capacity of the department of
home affairs. The communication difficulties and postal problems that
beset the country suggest that the production capacity and actual rate
of delivery will differ widely.”
The HSRC national survey contains a sobering result: 35 per cent of
those who applied for a new ID waited for more than 12 weeks before
receiving them, while 20 per cent waited for more than 20 weeks. Tom
Lodge, professor of politics at the University of the Witwatersrand,
talks about the “obduracy” of the department of home affairs in
insisting that it is right. In the Johannesburg local office alone 500
000 new IDs are waiting to be collected and he wonders to what extent
that situation is replicated at offices throughout South Africa.
The performance of the IEC so far in registering voters does not
inspire confidence. The first round late last year (which was divided
at the last minute into two phases) and the second at the end of
January were marred by too many reports of registration points which
did not open, were understaffed or staffed by undertrained people, or
impeded by faulty zip-zip machines meant to speed up the process of
registration.
After the second round IEC chief electoral officer Mandla Mchunu
confidently predicted that 8 million voters would be added to the 9
million plus registered last year. But the latest IEC figures show that
a total of only 14.1 million voters — just over 52 per cent of the
eligible electorate have registered. More significantly, Focus has seen
a preliminary analysis of the total that suggests that some parties may
be doing much better than others in getting their supporters out to
register. In ANC and DP strongholds registration seems to be running at
a rate of 55-56 per cent, slightly above the national average. However,
in what were white NP strongholds, the rate appears to be only 35 per
cent and in Asian and Coloured areas only 25-30 per cent.
With another registration drive scheduled in March, and local IEC
offices open for registration during the whole of this month, the final
figure may be quite impressive — on paper. Many observers, including
this writer, cannot help feeling uneasy in spite of all this optimism
The high figures they quote do not tally with video pictures depicting
a mere handful of people queuing to register and registration points
that have failed to open.
There is another critical point. A successful election will depend on
only a small number of potential voters being excluded as well as a
large number being included on the voters’ roll. If large numbers are
excluded through no fault of their own, the prospects of a smoothly run
election will not be good. Faced with uncertainty about the figures,
the spectre that haunted Kriegler cannot be dismissed as the paranoia
of an “ageing Afrikaner”. As he wisely remarked prudence dictates an
inclusive approach on IDs, a point which the opposition parties are
pressing for in their court applications.
President Mandela has, Focus understands on good authority, approached
the DP and NNP and mooted the idea of round table talks between their
leaders, home affairs minister Chief Buthelezi and Deputy President
Mbeki. However his initiative has run into heavy opposition from within
the ANC. Only if he can revive it can the credibility and legitimacy of
the election be saved.