Despite clear and binding international agreements to the contrary, evidence now available shows that President Robert Mugabe's ruling Zanu-PF is again planning to steal the next elections with the help of a grossly rigged electoral register.
After the 2008 elections, in which the opposition Movement for Democratic Change won a parliamentary majority but in which the MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, was forced to withdraw from the ensuing presidential election due to the overwhelming level of government-orchestrated violence, Zimbabwe's neighbours in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) stitched together a deal, the Global Political Agreement, which saw Mugabe remain as President with Tsvangirai as Prime Minister and a commitment to a new constitution with free and fair elections.
In terms of the GPA the constitution has to be passed by a popular referendum before elections can take place, probably around June 2012. But, of course, the new register is thus fundamental to both the referendum and the elections - for parliament and President.
In all previous elections the electoral register has been a major source of controversy. Drawn up by Tobaiwa Mudede, an outspoken Zanu-PF supporter, it was notoriously full of dead and fictional voters - who always voted Zanu-PF. Mudede regarded the register as a state secret and defied all court orders to make it available to the press or opposition parties.
When an NGO did finally procure a copy in 2002, it was found to contain at least twice as many voters as was plausible. Despite that, the supposedly independent Zimbabwe Election Commission (ZEC) - in fact stuffed with government supporters - never upheld any complaints about the register.
With this unhappy history in mind SADC insisted that a wholly new voters' roll be drawn up and that all the personnel of ZEC be changed to allow a properly independent commission to be constituted. These changes were then confirmed by the Zimbabwean parliament.