The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Regional parliament on Sadc Summit agenda

“This has seen the national parliament­s embarking on a process over the years to forge a working relationsh­ip with the SADC Secretaria­t to create space for parliament­arians to participat­e more formally in regional integratio­n processes.”

- Correspond­ent

The proposed transforma­tion of the SADC Parliament­ary Forum into a regional parliament is expected to be one of the issues for discussion by the 39th SADC Summit scheduled for Dar es Salaam, the United Republic of Tanzania in August.

This follows high-level support by leaders at the previous summit held in August 2018 to establish a regional parliament as an integral institutio­n to drive forward the regional integratio­n agenda.

The SADC Council of Ministers, which met in Windhoek, Namibia in March 2019, created a taskforce to undertake an analysis of the structure, functions and the governing legal framework of the proposed regional parliament and to present its findings for considerat­ion when the council meets again in Dar es Salaam in August.

The taskforce comprises members of the Double Troika supported by officials from the Secretaria­t and the SADC Parliament­ary Forum (SADC PF).

The proposed establishm­ent of the SADC Regional Parliament will provide a representa­tive institutio­n for the SADC citizenry, thereby serving as a valid interlocut­or for the needs and desires of the general public.

The Executive is already the main driver of regional integratio­n through intergover­nmental institutio­ns at senior officials, ministeria­l or heads of state and government­al levels.

The Judiciary was represente­d through the now suspended, but soon to be reconstitu­ted SADC Tribunal, whose primary role is expected to be that of ensuring compliance and resolution of disputes related to the interpreta­tion and applicatio­n of the SADC Treaty and subsidiary legal instrument­s.

A missing link would, therefore, be that of the Legislatur­e, whose central role would be to spearhead the domesticat­ion of regional policy and legal obligation­s outlined in the SADC Treaty and various sectoral protocols.

The newly elected SADC PF leadership, meeting for their 44th Session of the Plenary Assembly held in Maputo, Mozambique in July, agreed that transforma­tion into a regional parliament remains a top priority for the forum.

SADC PF President Veronica Macamo

Dlhovo, who is the Speaker of the Mozambican National Assembly said the forum will soon convene an urgent meeting to discuss how the transforma­tion into a regional parliament would become a reality.

Transforma­tion of the SADC PF into a regional parliament has been on the table since 2004, but the process and plans were not clearly defined until last year. The forum is an autonomous institutio­n of SADC establishe­d in 1997 as a regional inter-parliament­ary body made up of 14 national parliament­s, representi­ng over 3 500 parliament­arians in southern Africa.

The member parliament­s are Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Seychelles, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

However, the forum has not been able to fully contribute to policy making that is important for regional integratio­n because its formal role on SADC matters has not been fully recognised, nor does its work directly feed into the agenda of the intergover­nmental body.

This has seen the national parliament­s embarking on a process over the years to forge a working relationsh­ip with the SADC Secretaria­t to create space for parliament­arians to participat­e more formally in regional integratio­n processes.

In this regard, its transforma­tion into a regional parliament will help to bridge the gap between citizens of southern Africa and regional integratio­n processes.

The transforma­tion of the parliament will be premised on an agreement on a number of issues, which include that the parliament will not impede on the sovereignt­y of member states, and that it will only have an advisory function.

In terms of financial implicatio­ns of the establishm­ent of a regional parliament, this should not result in any increased costs for national budgets at the outset because the central financing will be based on the current arrangemen­t where member parliament­s make equal contributi­ons annually.

Another proposal is that the current secretaria­t of the SADC PF would continue to provide secretaria­t services to the regional parliament, with its headquarte­rs remaining in Windhoek, Namibia.

It is further proposed that the regional parliament would hold rotating sessions in the member states. This is already happening where plenary assemblies of the SADC PF are hosted by member parliament­s. — Adapted from sardc.net

 ??  ?? Veronica Macamo Dlhovo
Veronica Macamo Dlhovo
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe