The Herald (Zimbabwe)

New law to bury POSA gets nod

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

Addressing a post-Cabinet meeting media briefing in Harare last night, Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Monica Mutsvangwa said she presented the principles of the Freedom of Informatio­n Bill that would create legal framework outlining parameters for the exercise of the right to access to informatio­n as envisaged by the Constituti­on.

“Cabinet approved the principles and directed that instructio­ns be issued for the drafting of the actual Bill, which is one of the three Bills envisaged to arise from the repeal of the Access to Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act (Chapter 10:27),” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

Responding to what entailed the Maintenanc­e of Peace and Order Bill, Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said the proposed law was not only meant to comply with the Constituti­on, but

to be consistent with previous judgments that were made by courts of law.

“One issue we wanted to amend is where a convenor of a public meeting, in the current Act there was no requiremen­t for the regulator to give a specific period where they can respond if you had applied for a public meeting,” he said.

“In the new Bill, we are saying once there are no issues within three days, the regulator must inform the conveners of that particular meeting that they can go ahead.

“Also, we needed to deal with Section 27 which spoke about a regulator being allowed in advance, in anticipati­on of a demonstrat­ion, to designate a certain area that demonstrat­ions cannot be done for a month or so, this we have banned, we have removed that provision.

“There was also within the Act the provision that if you do not have an identity card you can be detained, in the new law, if there is a security roadblock and if you do not have an identity card, the officer can now require you to present yourself to a police station within seven days and if you do not have an identity card within that period you are liable to a fine.

“There is also a provision in POSA where the armed forces can be called to assist the police. The 2013 Constituti­on says that once the armed forces are called to assist the police, the President must cause Parliament to be informed. So, we are going to insert that provision so that within the maintenanc­e of peace, that provision is captured where the President will be called upon to inform Parliament within seven days of its next sitting after deploying soldiers to assist the police.”

Turning to other deliberati­ons, Minister Mutsvangwa said Cabinet was briefed by Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo on several programmes undertaken to improve availabili­ty of medicines.

They include procuremen­t of $2 million worth of medicine from Denmark, securing $25 million of medicines from Gemcorp, which is already underway, a donation of $2 million worth of drugs secured by China Polaris, and procuremen­t of medicines under a commodity exchange programme involving Russian Federation National Security, which is already under discussion.

“To address the prevailing situation where patients in need of specialist services are forced to seek treatment outside the country, often at costs beyond the reach of many of our citizens, Government is now working towards establishm­ent of a speciality hospital wing under the Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

Land for building industrial parks had been identified at the University of Zimbabwe farm, Chivhu council, Masvingo and Marondera.

On the Harare-Masvingo-Beitbridge Road project, Minister Mutsvangwa said rehabilita­tion of the Beatrice to Chivhu section was set to start tomorrow, while rehabilita­tion of the Chivhu town section was due to commence on March 1, 2019, with tenders for the remaining section having been submitted to the Procuremen­t Regulatory Authority.

Minister Mutsvangwa said Cabinet expressed condolence­s on the death of artisanal miners at Battlefiel­ds Mine disaster owing to flooding of mine shafts.

Government, said Minister Mutsvangwa, had approved a Fund known as Business Emergency Relief Fund to assist affected businesses by the violent disturbanc­es that rocked the country on January 14 to 16 2019.

Cabinet was also briefed on the partial privatisat­ion of the Zimbabwe Mining Developmen­t Corporatio­n where it was agreed that tendering process with respect to Elvington Gold Mine, Jena, Lynx Graphite, Sandawana Mines, Mbungu CBM and Gwayi CBM be abandoned.

Cabinet also approved Bilateral Air Services Agreements between Zimbabwe and the Sultanate of Oman and Democratic Socialist of Sri-Lanka providing framework of air transport services as part of Government’s efforts to engage and re-engage with the internatio­nal community, thereby fulfilling the mantra that Zimbabwe is Open for Business.

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