The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Gazette smooths transition to Uhuru

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The Herald, 21 March, 1980

A GOVERNMENT Gazette Extraordin­ary yesterday smoothed the way for the transition to independen­ce on April 18.

The gazette formally fixed the Independen­ce Day and formalised the transition of the 1979 Constituti­on to the Zimbabwe Constituti­on as agreed to at the Lancaster House conference.

It also provides for a report on the provisiona­l delimitati­on of Zimbabwe into 80 common roll constituen­cies as soon as possible after independen­ce, to be followed two years later by the delimitati­on itself.

The gazette provides for the recognitio­n of High Court judges appointed before independen­ce, and allows for people stripped of citizenshi­p to reapply within two years.

It also provides for the continuati­on of the state of emergency until the first Parliament of Zimbabwe sits to decide for itself on emergency powers.

Lessons For Today

◆ A gazette is an official Government publicatio­n. Government uses it to publish acts and bills, statutory instrument­s, regulation­s and notices in terms of acts, change of names, company registrati­ons and deregistra­tions, financial statements, land restitutio­n notices, liquor licence applicatio­ns and transport permits.

◆ The word gazette is derived from the Italian term gazetta. In the 1600s, there was a Venetian news sheet that became known as a gazetta because it cost a gazetta, a small-valued Venetian

coin. Other experts suggest that the word comes from gazza, a kind of bird — specifical­ly a chattering magpie — that would spread news.

◆ Gazetting the processes leading to independen­ce was a critical issue since it provided legal basis to what was happening on the ground.

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