The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Ambassador­s to solemnise marriages

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

ZIMBABWE’S ambassador­s accredited to other countries are set to solemnise marriages provided the couples meet the requiremen­ts set out by the law.

The National Assembly has since adopted a clause in the Marriages Bill which seek to design ambassador­s as marriage officers.

The amendment is one of several clauses that have been proposed and adopted by the National Assembly that will also see traditiona­l leaders being designated as marriage officers.

Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister, Ziyambi Ziyambi moved the amendment before the National Assembly last week.

The amendments are one of those Minister Ziyambi moved that have since been referred to Parliament’s Legal Committee to determine whether the amendments are consistent with the Constituti­on.

The developmen­t is expected to give convenienc­e to most Zimbabwean­s in the diaspora some of whom were being denied certain rights because they did not have marriage certificat­es.

The amendments read as follows: “Every head of an embassy of Zimbabwe in a foreign State or territory or of a diplomatic or consular mission in a foreign State or territory shall, by virtue of his or her office and so long as he or she holds such office, be a marriage officer while on duty at that embassy or mission, and shall exercise the duties of a marriage officer subject to such conditions as the Minister shall prescribe.”

One of the conditions is that parties to a proposed marriage must be a Zimbabwean citizen or permanent resident.

The amendments to have embassies solemnise marriage are part of others that Minister Ziyambi moved during debate on the Marriages Bill.

The Bill also allows traditiona­l leaders to solemnise marriages.

Another amendment on the Bill is a clause allowing unmarried couples living together on a genuine domestic basis to be regarded as civil partners.

This will mean that when the partnershi­p dissolves, the property will be divided or distribute­d in terms of the Matrimonia­l Clauses Act, which has hitherto applied only to those in registered unions who are divorced.

The clause allowing civil partnershi­p was rescinded last year after Cabinet directed that the section be withdrawn after objections that such a partnershi­p was not consistent with Zimbabwe’s customary and Christian values.

There were fears it would legalise “small houses”.

But on Thursday it was retained during the committee stage of the Bill’s progress through the National Assembly, but with an amendment that it only applied to those couples where neither partner was married to anyone else, either in a civil or customary union.

The clause seeks to strengthen the institutio­n of marriage, while protecting women who might find themselves in unregister­ed unions.

Minister Ziyambi told the House he had removed married people in the category of civil partnershi­ps “because this is what caused much debate so that we protect those in partnershi­p, but are not married”.

Partners in a civil partnershi­p have to be at least 18 and are bound by the same banns on close relations marrying as married couples.

 ??  ?? Minister Ziyambi
Minister Ziyambi

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