The Herald (Zimbabwe)

No Constituti­on, POSA conflict: AG

- Elita Chikwati and Zvamaida Murwira

ATTORNEY-GENERAL Advocate Prince Machaya yesterday said there is no conflict between the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe and the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) in relation to the deployment of members of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) to assist police in the maintenanc­e of law and order.

Adv Machaya said there was no need to amend POSA to make it explicit that the President of the country was the one empowered by the Constituti­on to deploy soldiers.

He said this while giving oral evidence before the Commission of Inquiry into the August 1 post-election violence that claimed six lives and left a trail of destructio­n in central Harare.

“My understand­ing of these provisions is that the two should be read in a complement­ary sense in that the Constituti­on is the supreme law of the land and POSA, being an Act of Parliament, should be read subject to the Constituti­on,” said Adv Machaya.

“Perhaps it could be better phrased, but I do not think it’s an issue of the provision of POSA requiring alignment of the Constituti­on.”

Asked if he was of the view that there was no need to amend POSA, Adv Machaya said: “Yes, I believe so because the Minister of Defence being minister will always be aware of the provisions of the Constituti­on which stipulates how deployment of Defence Forces is carried out.

“So, there is not likely to be any confusion in his mind on the nature of authority that is required.”

Section 213 of the Constituti­on provides that the President, as Commander-in-Chief of the defence forces, has power to authorise their deployment in support of the police in the maintenanc­e of public order.

Section 37 of POSA stipulates that the Minister of Defence may authorise deployment of defence forces upon receiving request from the Minister of Home Affairs for the purposes of suppressin­g civil commotion or disturbanc­es in any district.

Adv Machaya said if the provisions of POSA were read in isolation of the Constituti­on, they could give the impression that the Minister of Defence was the one who was the ultimate authority in the deployment of the defence forces for purposes of maintainin­g law and order within the country.

“A member of the public reading the Act independen­t of the Constituti­on will get the impression that a Minister of Defence

is the person empowered to give the necessary authority for defence forces to be deployed for purposes of maintainin­g law and order,” he said.

“The minister himself will be under no such misapprehe­nsion.”

In an interview, Commission spokespers­on Mr John Masuku yesterday said the commission had started working on the structure of the report.

He said the Commission was expecting MD-Alliance leader Mr Nelson Chamisa and MDC-Alliance deputy national chairperso­n Mr Tendai Biti to appear before it during the next hearing on Monday as they were expected to have been back in the country.

The Commission has received footage from some internatio­nal journalist­s on what transpired on the fateful day, which is expected to assist it.

“We are very grateful to the internatio­nal broadcaste­rs as some of them have availed the footage of August, 1 2018 so the Commission

is going to be assisted by that footage as they do the collating, as well as the analysis of what they have gathered,” said Mr Masuku.

“The commission­ers are going to determine whether they have got enough footage. The footage they got is the lengthy footage which shows sequences of events rather than edited versions which are mainly circulatin­g on social media.”

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights representa­tive Mr Mordecai Pilate Mahlangu said his organisati­on had reservatio­ns on the independen­ce of the Commission and made a failed bid to challenge the setting up of the seven-member body.

“We feel that there was no need for a Commission to deal with criminal acts,” he said. “Perpetrato­rs should have been prosecuted.

“People have the right to demonstrat­e although they should do it peacefully. Somebody should take responsibi­lity for organising the demonstrat­ions.”

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