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S. Africa Judge Upholds Vote Rule

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<i> Associated Press</i>

A South African judge on Friday rejected an opposition party’s argument that a voter registration process was unconstitutional.

The National Party, which ruled during apartheid, had challenged a rule that South Africans must use a computer-readable identification document to vote and to register to vote. The party claimed that the rule could disenfranchise millions of people in the nation’s second all-race elections.

In a 54-page written judgment, High Court Judge Deon van Zyl said that voters had been given ample time to get the documents, which were introduced in 1986.

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About 80% of blacks have the bar-coded identification documents, compared with 65% of whites. The National Party fears that will translate into more votes for the ruling African National Congress.

President Nelson Mandela has said the vote could be held in May.

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