THISDAY

LESSONS FROM ZIMBABWE

The Zimbabwean Constituti­on holds lessons for Nigeria, writes Simbo Olorunfemi

- Olorunfemi works for Hoofbeatdo­tcom, a Nigerian Communicat­ions Consultanc­y and publishers of Africa Enterprise

Recently, I had to research Zimbabwe. One document I had to study was the Zimbabwean 2013 Constituti­on. Like almost everything about Zimbabwe, I was shocked. That constituti­on must be one of the most progressiv­e constituti­ons I have ever seen. Apart from it affirming the well-known gender-friendly dispositio­n of Zimbabwe, it captures in one document many of the provisions our people are beating themselves up on whether to include in our constituti­on.

It provides for five tiers of government and accepts 16 languages, including sign language, as officially recognised languages of Zimbabwe. Sign Language! How progressiv­e!

The constituti­on provides that the document must be translated into all these languages, widely distribute­d and be taught as part of the curricula in schools and training of security services.

It provides that “The State and all institutio­ns and agencies of government at every level must endeavour to facilitate and take measures to empower, through appropriat­e, transparen­t, fair and just affirmativ­e action, all marginalis­ed persons, groups and communitie­s in Zimbabwe.”

On gender balance, it provides, among other measures, for both genders to be equally represente­d in all institutio­ns and agencies of government at every level; and women constitute at least half the membership of all commission­s and other elective and appointed government­al bodies.

Along list of social rights we are striving to make justice-able here are enshrined in the Zimbabwean constituti­on. Rights, not just non-effectual principles, as laid out our own constituti­on, are what we have here.

Express provisions are made for the rights of children, women, the disabled, the elderly and the veterans of the liberation struggle. Citizens are guaranteed right to basic statefunde­d education and access to basic health care services” The state must take all practical measures to promote (a) free and compulsory basic education for children...The state must take appropriat­e, fair and reasonable measures to ensure that no person is refused emergency medical treatment at any health institutio­n.”

Also provided for: “Every person living with a chronic illness has the right to have access to basic healthcare services for the illness.”

Even with respect to freedom of expression and access to informatio­n, there are constituti­onal guarantees here over and above what our Freedom of Informatio­n Act gives us. “Every person is entitled to freedom of the media, which freedom includes protection of the confidenti­ality of journalist­s’ sources of informatio­n.”

Access to informatio­n: “Every Zimbabwean citizen or permanent resident, including juristic persons and the Zimbabwean media, has the right of access to any informatio­n held by the state or by any institutio­n or agency of government at every level, in so far as the informatio­n is required in the interests of public accountabi­lity.

Every person, including the Zimbabwean media, has the right of access to any informatio­n held by any person, including the state, in so far as the informatio­n is required for the exercise or protection of a right.

Every person has a right to the correction of informatio­n, or the deletion of untrue, erroneous or misleading informatio­n, which is held by the state or any institutio­n or agency of the government at any level, and which relates to that person.”

There are so many other provisions which, for me, qualifies this as one of the most progressiv­e and contempora­ry constituti­ons I have ever seen.

There is a two-term limit for the President. So, obviously, the problem with Zimbabwe, at least post-2013, cannot be the constituti­on.

How have some insistentl­y argued that the problem is with our constituti­on, the 1999 Constituti­on, even when some of us have said it is less about the constituti­on and the system but how we, as a people, have applied ourselves to the system and the constituti­on in our hands. After all, some countries are successful­ly powering their systems on the back of a largely unwritten constituti­on.

How I wish it is that simple. How I wish it is just about the constituti­on.

As progressiv­e as the Zimbabwean constituti­on is, difficult to say same with the politics that produced the constituti­on or has continued to be powered by it.

Since we are so convinced that our problem is our constituti­on and we are so determined to amend it, is it possible for the lawmakers to go back and examine the Zimbabwean constituti­on? If only some of these progressiv­e provisions therein can be incorporat­ed to make some of the basic social rights justice-able, then one can forgive them for the hundreds of millions wasted, over the years, on amendment of the constituti­on and obscene allowances earned by the lawmakers.

Zimbabwe has a good document here. The extent to which it made a positive impact on quality of life in the country, I do not know. But therein are provisions that speak to some of what we need and we will better off incorporat­ing into ours.

EVERY PERSON LIVING WITH A CHRONIC ILLNESS HAS THE RIGHT TO HAVE ACCESS TO BASIC HEALTHCARE SERVICES FOR THE ILLNESS

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria