The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Hectic schedule for new Parly session

- Lincoln Towindo

DURING the Second Session of the Ninth Parliament, which opens on Tuesday, Government intends to fast-track the enactment of legislatio­n that underpins political and economic reforms, including introducin­g some Constituti­onal amendments to entrench democracy and personal freedoms.

The new legislatio­n that will be tabled before the august House is informed by recommenda­tions from the Inter-Minister Taskforce that was set up by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in March.

The President will spell out his legislativ­e agenda when he opens Parliament this week.

According to a schedule of proposed legislativ­e work gleaned by The Sunday Mail, the Constituti­on is expected to be amended in order to entrench devolution.

There are proposals to extend the women’s quota in Parliament beyond 2023, and scrapping the running mate clause for Presidenti­al elections, which was set to kick in during the next elections.

A law to de-link the national census from the delimitati­on exercise, which involves drawing up electoral boundaries, will also be considered.

Further, a new Electoral Act will be tabled for debate in Parliament, while Government will set up an independen­t mechanism to handle complaints of misconduct by members of the security services in line with Section 210 of the Constituti­on.

Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said legislatio­n that supports political and economic reforms will dominate the Executive’s legislativ­e agenda.

“For the forthcomin­g session, we presented (to Cabinet) our matrix on all the legislativ­e reforms we want to do and some rough timelines,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“The forthcomin­g year will be very busy; we will be considerin­g our electoral laws for reform.

“By 2020 we should have come up with a new Electoral Act that speaks to issues raised by observers and those that will come up from the consultati­ons that we will do.

“We have given ourselves up to June 2020 to identify provisions in the Electoral Act

that may require amendment and we should have the Bill passed by Parliament by 2020.”

Amendments

Minister Ziyambi said tweaking the supreme law will be done through an omnibus Constituti­on Amendment Bill.

“We are also preparing a Constituti­onal Amendment Bill. We need to take care of the devolution aspect.

“We need to amend the Constituti­on to remove Members of Parliament from being members of Provincial Councils.”

He said delimitati­on will be delinked from the national census in order to prevent a potential administra­tive disaster

that might result from conducting the two processes on the eve of the 2023 elections.

The Constituti­on obliges the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) to draw up new electoral boundaries every ten years, immediatel­y after a national population census, which is due in 2022.

There are fears that the elections management body will not have adequate time to carry out delimitati­on ahead of the polls.

Minister Ziyambi said: “We also are going to amend the Constituti­on in order to delink the census from delimitati­on and we realise that in the Constituti­on, census is linked to delimitati­on, yet delimitati­on is on the basis of registered voters.

“We are also amending the Constituti­on to continue with the women’s quota.

“Another amendment has to do with removing the running mate clause.”

Deepening freedoms

Laws that seek to deepen personal freedoms, as envisioned by the Second Republic’s reform agenda, will also be tabled.

“We also have other Bills that are part of the matrix, including the Freedom of Informatio­n Bill, the Data Protection Bill and the Zimbabwe Media Commission Bill — those that have to do with freedoms that people enjoy in a democratic society.

“We are introducin­g them to give people more freedoms in line with the recommenda­tions that came up from the Inter-Ministeria­l Committee and the (election) observer reports,” he said.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa

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