Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Posa, Police Act set for amendment

- Auxilia Katongomar­a Chronicle Reporter

GOVERNMENT is set to amend the Public Order and Security Act (Posa), the Police Act as well as the Citizenshi­p Act as part of an initiative to align legislatio­n with the Constituti­on.

Outlining his Ministry’s 100 day plan, Justice Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Cde Ziyambi Ziyambi said the Home Affairs Ministry under which the said laws fall, was lagging behind in terms of complying with the new Constituti­on as it has not amended a single law.

There has previously been resistance to amend some laws but this reluctance to comply with the Constituti­on is being addressed by the new political dispensati­on.

The Government under President Emmerson Mnangagwa has since pledged to entrench civil liberties.

Cde Ziyambi said his Ministry has a biller tracker which tracks proposed laws for all Ministries so that drafting is done through the AG’s office.

“We identified laws which need alignment and the Attorney General is following up with Home Affairs Ministry. We hope the Registrar’s General’s Office , the department of Immigratio­n and the police will co-operate,” said Cde Ziyambi.

Cde Ziyambi said there were about five Acts that fall under the Home Affairs Ministry that need to be amended amd these include Posa.

“We have some Ministries in particular Home Affairs that have not aligned a single legislatio­n and within the next 100 days we are working with them to ensure that the majority of these laws are aligned,” said Cde Ziyambi.

Home Affairs have to align the Citizenshi­p Act (chapter 4:91), Immigratio­n Act (Chapter 4:02), Official Secrets Act (Chapter11:09), Police Act (Chapter 11:10) and Public Order and Security Act ( Chapter11:17).

Minister Ziyambi said most Ministries had ‘done something’ in terms of aligning laws with the constituti­on.

He however said some officials have been reluctant to align laws with the Constituti­on.

Registrar General Mr Tobaiwa Mudede has previously insisted that Government will not seek to re-align the Citizenshi­p Act with the Constituti­on but would instead amend the supreme law to abolish prov i s i ons allowing dual citizenshi­p.

The new Constituti­on allows for one to hold dual c it i z e ns h ip and Mr Mudede has said this posed a number of security challenges for the country.

Mr Mudede said some of the challenges include cases of tax evasion, evasion from justice, and involvemen­t in cases of human traffickin­g, internatio­nal terrorism and problems in immigratio­n control. He said Sections 36, 37 and 43 of the (new) Constituti­on had to be amended.

Recently, High Court judge Justice Nyaradzo Munangati-Manongwa ruled that aliens could register to vote after being turned away by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) in the ongoing Biometric Voter Registrati­on exercise.

“Any person born in Zimbabwe who is of or over eighteen (18) years with an identifica­tion card endorsed “Alien” and a birth certificat­e showing that such person was born in Zimbabwe, and at least one of the parents of such person was born in Zimbabwe or from the SADC region, with proof that he or she was ordinarily resident in Zimbabwe on the relevant publicatio­n date in 2013, is entitled to be registered by the first respondent to vote without any impediment or additional requiremen­t other than requiremen­ts relating to all people,” reads part of the judgement. — @AuxiliaK.

 ??  ?? Minister Ziyambi
Minister Ziyambi

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