The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Another dull legislativ­e year

- Lincoln Towindo

In his last State of the Nation Address and official opening of the Second Session of the Ninth Parliament in the last quarter of last year, President Mnangagwa expressed displeasur­e at the pace at which laws were being passed by Parliament.

The President said the slow pace in law-making was stifling developmen­t and the Government’s reform agenda.

“The law must be a universal instrument of developmen­t. As such, the slow pace in this august House, which has resulted in a low number of Bills passing through Parliament cannot be allowed to continue,” said President Mnangagwa.

“I, thus, challenge honourable members in their individual and collective capacities, to play their part in speeding up our parliament­ary processes.”

Only a handful of Bills had been passed during the first session of Parliament while most remained work in progress or were yet to be tabled.

When the President opened the inaugural session of the Ninth Parliament, he laid down an expansive legislativ­e agenda of 27 Bills.

These included a cocktail of proposals to align the Constituti­on, ease of doing business, economic and political reforms.

However, only half a dozen Bills were passed, a developmen­t that appeared to incense the President.

Bills progress

Laws that were passed include the Consumer Protection Act, the Microfinan­ce Amendment Act Bill and the Companies and Other Business Entities Act.

The Maintenanc­e of Peace and Order Bill was also passed and signed into law towards the end of last year.

Proposed laws that remained outstandin­g during the first session include the Regional Town and Country Planning Amendment Bill, which seeks to reduce the time and procedures for processing constructi­on permits.

Also left out was Mines and Minerals Amendment Bill that was passed in the last session of the Eighth Parliament and will be re-tabled to address some inadequaci­es such as providing for online registrati­on of mining rights and title.

The Gold Trade Bill and the Precious Stones Trade Bill, which seek to curb leakage of precious minerals was not tabled despite being on the legislativ­e agenda.

The Cyber Crime and Cyber Security Bill, the Data Protection Bill and the Electronic Transactio­ns and Electronic Commercial Bill were left out as well.

While the Citizenshi­p of Zimbabwe Act was gazetted it is yet to be passed and amendments to the Immigratio­n Act are still work in progress.

The Zimbabwe Investment and Developmen­t Agency Bill was passed during the second session in the final weeks of 2019, but is yet to be signed into law.

In a major developmen­t, Parliament passed the Tripartite Negotiatin­g Forum Bill before it was subsequent­ly and assented to by the President in June.

The Act now gives legal effect to the framework that seeks to confer powers and functions of the forum in relation to consultati­on, cooperatio­n and negotiatio­n on social and economic issues by Government, business and labour.

The Labour Amendment Bill will be brought to the House for discussion and approval.

The Zimbabwe Media Commission Bill and the Freedom of Informatio­n Bill were also gazetted, but are yet to go through requisite processes ahead of debates in the House. Government also tabled the Coroners Bill, which will create the Coroner-General’s Office, whose mandate will be to investigat­e unnatural deaths that occur in health institutio­ns, police cells, prisons and any other places.

In December the Speaker of the National Assembly received non-adverse reports by the Parliament­ary Legal Committee on the Freedom of Informatio­n Bill, Marriages Bill, Internatio­nal Treaties Bill, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill, Veterans of the Liberation Struggle Bill, and the Constituti­onal Court Bill, paving the way for debates to commence.

Other laws that were on the legislativ­e agenda, but are yet to be gazetted include:

◆ Cooperativ­e Societies Amendment Bill;

◆ Rural District Councils Bill to give rural councils greater autonomy;

◆ Amendments to the Traditiona­l Leaders Act to provide for the establishm­ent of Provincial Assemblies;

◆ The Provincial and Metropolit­an Councils Bill to facilitate the devolution and outline responsibi­lities of provincial and local authoritie­s;

◆ The Customary Law and Local Courts Bill to provide for the exclusion of harmful cultural practices from Customary Law;

◆ The Child Justice Bill which seeks to provide a child justice system

◆ The Mandatory Sentencing for Rape and Sexual Abuse Bill which will provide mandatory sentences for rape and other sexual offences

Most of these Bills were not tabled before the House. MPs in bribery storm

The year in Parliament was not short of high drama and intrigue, either.

Four parliament­arians — Mr Temba Mliswa (Norton independen­t), Cde Leonard Chikomba (Gokwe Kabuyuni,

ZANU-PF),

Mr Anele Ndebele (Magwegwe MDC-A) and Binga North representa­tive Mr Prince Sibanda ( — were accused of solic

MD-A) iting bribe.

The four were investigat­ed on allegation­s of demanding a $400 000 bribe from a local businessma­n Mr James Ross Goddard of

Contractin­g (Pvt) Ltd, as “facilitati­on fee”

JRG to enable the latter’s company to secure a mining contract at Hwange Colliery.

A Privileges Committee set up to investigat­e the matter found the four guilty of bribery and putting the august House into disrepute.

They were found guilty of convening meetings away from Parliament Building under the guise of holding official business. The four were then banned from sitting in the portfolio committee on mines and had a day’s allowance docked before being ordered to apologise to the House.

Allowance-gate

parliament­arians courted

MDC-ALLIANCE the wrath of the Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda who punished the opposition caucus for walking out on official business presided over by the President.

The Speaker temporaril­y barred MDC

Alliance legislator­s from posing questions to Cabinet ministers due to their refusal to recognise President Mnangagwa. He later reversed the decision.

Earlier, the Speaker had frozen sitting allowances for 112 MDC-ALLIANCE MPs after they walked out on the President’s SONA.

The opposition caucus approached the courts seeking relief before a nine-member Privileges Committee was set up to investigat­e the legislator­s’ walkouts.

MDC-ALLIANCE

New Parliament Building makes progress

Impressive progress was made during the year in constructi­on of the state-of-theart Parliament building in Mount Hampden.

President Mnangagwa toured the site in November during which he expressed satisfacti­on with the progress made by the contractor­s — China’s Shanghai Constructi­on Group ( SCG).

The visit was his third since constructi­on began in November 2018.

“We are happy to see the progress. We are amazed by the amount of progress at each visit which has achieved over a

SCG very short period,” he said at the time.

The multi-storey structure — one of the largest buildings being funded by China in Zimbabwe — is set for completion in March next year.

 ??  ?? While the Citizenshi­p of Zimbabwe Act was gazetted it is yet to be passed and amendments to the Immigratio­n Act are still work in progress.
While the Citizenshi­p of Zimbabwe Act was gazetted it is yet to be passed and amendments to the Immigratio­n Act are still work in progress.

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