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Early voting took place in Zimbabwe last week,
setting the stage for presidential, parliamentary and local elections July 31 in the Southern African nation despite calls that the balloting be postponed to ensure an orderly and credible vote.
Police officers and soldiers who will be on duty on Election Day went to special polling places July 14 and 15, reportedly in large numbers.
Although electoral officials worked feverishly to overcome problems caused by late delivery of ballots, the process did not go smoothly.
Many logistical problems were encountered, including late or complete lack of delivery of paper ballots to some polling stations.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission reported that a substantial number of members of the disciplined forces and electoral officers were unable to cast votes because their papers did not reach their special voting centers in time or at all.
Opposition leaders and civil society members worried that junior officers and those in the ranks were under duress to rally behind President Robert Mugabe.
The reports of polling-place confusion and missing ballots fit with the overall pattern of an election process that so far has been underfunded and plagued by irregularities in voter registration, serious questions about the condition of the voters’ roll and deficiencies in other procedures.
The United States is deeply concerned that the elections are moving ahead in the absence of security sector, media and other reforms that the Zimbabwean government and the Southern African Development Community, SADC,
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