Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Conflicts resolution commission to have 10-year lifespan

- Pamela Shumba Senior Reporter

THE proposed National Healing, Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which is expected to promote national healing, unity and the peaceful resolution of conflicts in the country will have a 10-year lifespan.

In his opening remarks at the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission Bill public hearing in Bulawayo yesterday, the chairperso­n of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee, Senator Damian Mumvuri said the purpose of the Bill is to come up with an enabling Act that will operationa­lise the Commission.

“The purpose of the Bill is to legislate an enabling Act that will operationa­lise the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission that will have a working period of 10 years. The commission, when establishe­d, will among others develop and implement programmes to promote national healing, unity and cohesion and the peaceful resolution of conflicts and disputes,” said Senator Mumvuri.

The public hearings are being spearheade­d by a joint team comprising the National Assembly’s Portfolio Committee on Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs, the Senate’s Thematic Committee on Human Rights and the Thematic Committee on Peace and Security.

Senator Mumvuri said the public hearings were being held in all the country’s provinces to invite comments and suggestion­s from members of the public on the Bill.

Bulawayo residents who participat­ed at yesterday’s public hearing said the Bill was not different from the original one as it did not capture their concerns.

Ms Patricia Tshabalala, a Mpopoma resident said: “We were promised that the national healing process would be done according to our requests. It’s dishearten­ing to note that the Bill is not different from the one we rejected.

“We want the perpetrato­rs of the disturbanc­es that occurred in the 1980s to admit so that we can move on. We will not progress if we don’t tell the truth. People were killed, women and children were raped and this has affected families since then.”

A Bulawayo youth, Mr Takunda Madzana said it was important for members of the public to be educated on why the nation needed healing and reconcilia­tion.

“We can’t have a healing process when we don’t know what happened. As young people, we don’t know what happened and we want to know why this healing process is important for us,” he said.

Other participan­ts reiterated the importance of a smooth healing process, saying the young generation must not inherit hatred. — @pamelashum­ba1

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe