HARARE, Zimbabwe — Police, soldiers and officials stood in line to vote across Zimbabwe for a second day on Monday after polling the day before was mired in chaos with ballot papers, ballot boxes and other materials not delivered in time.
Special voting for about 80,000 government personnel, who will be on duty during the July 31 crucial national elections, was scheduled to close after dusk, but could be extended to Tuesday if voters already unable to cast their ballots, officials said.
On Sunday, voting did not take place at some of the 210 polling stations because printing of election papers was delayed, electoral commission deputy chair Joyce Kazembe said.
The commission, however, "does not foresee a repeat of delays" for the full national elections starting in just over two weeks, Kazembe said Monday.
More than 9,000 voting stations are planned for full elections.
At one Harare voting post on Monday, police officers waiting in line jostled impatiently. Earlier, a senior officer had addressed a throng of rowdy police who broke a window at a suburban meeting hall used for voting.
"We do admit we didn't foresee the difficulties" that became apparent in the early vote, Kazembe said. "We underestimated the task, we had not anticipated the magnitude of the process."
The nation's long-time President Robert Mugabe set the national polls for July 31 arguing he was obeying a court ruling ordering him to call for early elections.