The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt to implement Motlanthe Commission recommenda­tions

- Farirai Machivenyi­ka Senior Reporter

GOVERNMENT is in the process of implementi­ng recommenda­tions made by the Motlanthe Commission after the August 1, 2018 violence that left six people dead and will prosecute those responsibl­e when investigat­ions are completed.

The Motlanthe Commission was set up by President Mnangagwa following the violent protests that flared up after the harmonised elections last year which resulted in the death of six people and left at least 35 others injured.

Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Sibusiso Moyo yesterday said Government had already begun modernisin­g 30 laws to enhance media freedoms and other democratic rights.

“Zimbabwe has rapidly begun the task of implementi­ng the Commission’s key recommenda­tions — that include reforming legislatio­n on law and order, freedom and liberalisa­tion of the media and electoral reform,” Minister Moyo said.

The Public Order and Security Act has since been replaced by the Maintenanc­e of Peace and Order Act while the Access to Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act is in the process of being repealed.

Government is also implementi­ng a raft of other economic reforms espoused in the Transition­al Stabilisat­ion Programme (TSP) in line with the goal of making Zimbabwe a middle income economy by 2030.

The Motlanthe Commission found that the violent protests were pre-planned and organised by the opposition MDC-Alliance.

It recommende­d the retraining of police to be profession­al and non-partisan, and to take action against the members of the security forces responsibl­e for the killing of civilians during the protests.

Minister Moyo said action would be taken against those members responsibl­e early next year.

“We can expect prosecutio­ns of those responsibl­e to begin next year, after the police and prosecutio­n services have completed their post-inquiry investigat­ions,” he said.

He added that the Government had embarked on the reform process that is painful in some instances, but was necessary.

“Currently, we are undertakin­g all these reforms, all the painful processes that are needed and necessary without any form of external assistance,” Minister Moyo said.

The minister said internatio­nal support would strengthen the pace of reform in Zimbabwe and the Government’s drive for reconcilia­tion and justice.

The progress made by Zimbabwe was recently acknowledg­ed by Commonweal­th Secretary-General Patricia Scotland, who met President Mnangagwa during the UN General Assembly last month.

“I think there are a number of areas where Zimbabwe has made real reforms. No one is perfect and it is a journey,” Baroness Scotland said in September.

Zimbabwe is seeking re-admission into the Commonweal­th which is in line with the overall re-engagement policy that Government has embarked on.

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