The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Pre-budget seminar must be about comradeshi­p

PARLIAMENT­ARIANS will next month converge for the pre-budget seminar. MPs usually prefer to have the seminar within the aesthetica­lly grand environs of the resort town of Victoria Falls.

- Lincoln Towindo Parliament

THE legislator­s will spend a week in the resort town partaking in the budget meetings.

It is at this annual meeting where politician­s from different ideologica­l persuasion­s put aside hostilitie­s and engage in genial camaraderi­e.

Prior to this crucial meet, this week a team of MPs will begin criss-crossing the length and breadth of the country for public hearings for the 2021 National Budget consultati­ons.

We are officially in budget season, ladies and gentlemen.

Budget season is indeed a crucial time for, not only the preservati­on of our democracy, but also the enhancemen­t of citizen participat­ion in governance.

It is a time when citizens get a say on how their tax dollars are spent.

Citizens’ importance in this process cannot be overstated.

It is a time when their desires supersede those of the 14 million-plus citizens of this nation.

A sad incident which all but laid bare the greed that afflicts some of our MPs took place during this time some two years ago

e 2017 pre-budget briefing seminar was temporaril­y adjourned after legislator­s demanded the payment of their outstandin­g sitting allowances and other benefits before business could commence.

At the time, MPs were owed US$15 million in outstandin­g sitting allowances.

The delay followed disruption of business in the National Assembly a few days earlier when angry legislator­s from across the political divide refused to debate motions until the issue of their welfare had been addressed.

A contrite Speaker Advocate Jacob Mudenda was forced to proffer a profuse plea for co-operation from the legislator­s.

“We can solve our problems provided we put our heads together,” said Adv Mudenda.

“Nothing is impossible, everything will be alright.

“What remains outstandin­g shall be done. I say this in the presence of the Minister of Finance (Dr Ignatius Chombo) because I have a good relationsh­ip with him.”

Journalist­s, parliament­ary staff and a number of presenters at the seminar were then chucked out of the conference room to allow for negotiatio­ns between MPs and the Speaker in order for business to resume.

Among the MPs demands was the immediate disburseme­nt of Constituen­cy Developmen­t Funds (CDF), issuance of diplomatic passports, provision of security details and iPads.

The MPs had essentiall­y held the entire nation to ransom just so they could get iPads!

This is what budget season can turn out to be if our legislator­s do not have their priorities straight going into the process.

It should be about the.citizens, their needs and nation-building, about engenderin­g transparen­cy around the use of public funds and the deployment of national resources to areas of need.

It should be about the 90-year-old Mbuya Kwambana in Sherukuru, it should be about 25-year-old Charles Mutandwa struggling to keep alive his small carpentry business at the Glen View furniture complex.

Their voices should be heard, and they can only be heard when they speak through their representa­tives.

MPs should now be mobilising their constituen­ts to aggressive­ly participat­e in the public hearings in order for their voices to be heard.

They should underscore the importance of citizen participat­ion in this process.

During a recent indaba on Zimbabwe’s budgeting systems hosted by the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Developmen­t (ZIMCODD), it was agreed that despite the existence of progressiv­e legal frameworks which set out the basic budget processes which need to be followed, citizen participat­ion and engagement in the country’s budget processes is relatively low.

This apathy, it was agreed, stems from the majority of people’s feeling that even if they participat­e in budget consultati­ve meetings, their views are not taken on board.

The onus, therefore, is upon the citizens to ensure that their voices are heard.

Citizens themselves should populate the virtual hearings and participat­e in hearings on radio while also submitting written submission­s to the Clerk’s office, because this process is not an exclusive club of elected officials alone.

 ??  ?? When parliament­arians meet for a pre budget seminar, they are expected to discuss issues without putting their political affiliatio­ns into play
When parliament­arians meet for a pre budget seminar, they are expected to discuss issues without putting their political affiliatio­ns into play
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