The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Fresh consultati­ons on Mining Bill:

- Oliver Kazunga Senior Business Reporter

A FRESH public consultati­on process will be conducted for the Mines and Minerals Act and the Minerals Exploratio­n and Marketing Corporatio­n Amendment Bills, which failed to sail through all the stages of Parliament in the Fourth Session.

Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Mines and Energy member, Mr John Holder, who is also the legislator for Zvishavane-Ngezi constituen­cy, told small-scale miners at a meeting in Bulawayo last week that:

“Only the Pan African Minerals University has seen the light of day after going through all the stages of the Parliament process, before its approval by President (Mugabe).

“The reason for the speedy process was that the Bill was removed from the Ministry of Mines and Mining Developmen­t and sent to the Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education because it was considered to be the appropriat­e line ministry”.

Mr Holder said amendments to the Mines and Minerals Act and the Minerals Exploratio­n and Marketing Corporatio­n Bill, failed to sail through the Parliament­ary process due to a number of contentiou­s issues raised during the public hearings.

He said as a result of this failure, fresh public consultati­ons regarding amendments to the two proposed bills would be repeated during the Fifth Session of (the 8th) Parliament that was officially opened by President Mugabe last week.

“The Minerals Exploratio­n Bill lapsed following the end of the third session of Parliament in September 2016. The fourth session ended in August and Parliament is now in its fifth session and the Minister of Mines and Mining Developmen­t has not re-introduced the Bill.

“There was brief debate on the Bill during the third session of Parliament but the debate did not proceed because session of Parliament came to an end,” said Mr Holder.

Amendment to the Mines and Minerals Act were gazetted in August 2016 and Parliament conducted public hearings in September of the same year.

“In the fourth session of Parliament, the Bill only went through the first reading stage and was sent to the Parliament­ary Legal Committee (PLC) for scrutiny. The PLC produced a report highlighti­ng that the Bill did not violate any provisions of the constituti­on. “However, the Fourth Session of Parliament came to the end and the Bill was not passed,” he said.

Mr Holder said their committee has sought audience with the Minister of Mines and Mining Developmen­t, Walter Chidhakwa, to understand the delays on the two bills, with the possibilit­y of holding a workshop with the committee to discuss the contentiou­s issues that arose during public consultati­ons and also from the committee’s own deliberati­ons.

“There were many contentiou­s issues that were raised during the public consultati­ons, which include the unclear reasons behind the classifica­tion of the strategic minerals; the compositio­n of the mining affairs board particular­ly on the role of the secretary of mines.

“Parliament is currently having considerat­ion a new Bill known as the Public Entities and Corporate Governance that seeks to address the role of permanent secretarie­s in relation to boards and parastatal­s under their ministries,” said Mr Holder.

“This Bill seeks to address issues of good corporate governance and the committee on mines and energy will have under considerat­ion some of the provisions in that Bill, in order to improve the Mines and Minerals Amendment Bill.”

He said other contentiou­s issues include the impact associated with the introducti­on of the cadastre mining system, especially on artisanal and small-scale mining, whether the Bill will be able to address the farmer-miner relations and the impact of the “use-it-or-lose it policy” particular­ly on large-scale producers who own numerous claims.

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