Many Zimbabwean voters are centenarians and some are in prams
No fair referendum or election can be held in Zimbabwe on the basis of the current voters' roll, according to a report published by the South African Institute of Race Relations (the Institute).
The report (see here - PDF), written by Professor R W Johnson, breaks new ground by providing a detailed analysis of the Zimbabwe voters' roll, as it stood in October 2010.
The Zimbabwe Government has long been at pains to keep the content of the voters' roll under wraps, but Johnson has nevertheless succeeded in getting and studying it. His evaluation shows why Zanu-PF prefers to keep the roll confidential.
Notes Johnson: "Though life expectancy in Zimbabwe has dropped to 45 years, the voters' roll, as it stood in October 2010, contains the names of:
- roughly 1 490 ‘new' voters (never previously registered) aged over 100;
- some 41 100 voters (some new and some earlier listed) aged 100 or more, which is four times the number of centenarians in Britain;
- about 4 370 new voters over 90 years old; and
- a total of some 132 500 such nonagenarians."
The voters roll also has roughly 16 800 voters who not only share the same date of birth - recorded as 1st January 1901 - but were also toddlers at the time that Cecil John Rhodes died in March 1902. All of them are now more than 110 years old.