The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

MPs snub Constituen­cy Developmen­t Fund

- Lincoln Towindo Parliament

PARLIAMENT’S decade-long experiment with the Constituen­cy Developmen­t Fund appears incapable of evading turbulent waters. It was announced recently that nearly two-thirds of legislator­s (142 MPs) had not applied for CDF with Parliament now in its third quarter of its ninth session.

A further 87 MPs did not apply for the funds between 2018 and 2019.

Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda made the startling announceme­nt during a recent sitting, where he admonished legislator­s for not taking the fund,which is a vehicle for community-led developmen­t , seriously.

Adv Mudenda had to make an impassione­d supplicati­on to party whips to cajole their caucuses into applying for the funding.

“Members, it has been brought to my attention that although we are now in the third quarter of our ninth session, only 68 members have applied for the 2020 Constituen­cy Developmen­t Fund (CDF),” said Adv Mudenda.

“Statistics show that 142 members have not applied for the year 2020; 67 Honourable Members did not apply for the 2019 allocation­s and 20 did not apply for the 2018 allocation.”

He said while the money appropriat­ed for the programme for the current financial year may have been whittled down by inflation, this was no reason for legislator­s to completely ignore the fund.

“The money can be put to good use in the constituen­cies that you represent especially now during Covid-19, the period when schools and clinics are in need of PPE, sanitisers, extra chairs and desks”.

He added: “May I request the Whips to assist in following up on the Honourable Members of their political parties.”

The CDF was first introduced in 2010 primarily as a developmen­t vehicle through which communitie­s are in charge of small and high-impact projects that affect their daily lives.

The fund would bypass central bureaucrac­ies and channel funding to community level to improve people’s livelihood­s.

The first CDF allotment of US$8 million meant each constituen­cy would receive US$50 000 to fund community-level projects such as road repairs, constructi­on of dip tanks, libraries, refurbishm­ent of schools and clinics and local income-generating projects.

The programme soon ran into choppy waters amid allegation­s of impropriet­y by some legislator­s as well as budgetary constraint­s.

No sooner had the Fund been introduced than cases of pillaging were awash in the press. Four Parliament­arians were arrested by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) to face charges of corruption and abuse of public funds.

The four MPs, Albert Mhlanga (MDC-T Pumula), Marvellous Khumalo (MDC-T St Mary’s), Cleopas Machacha (MDC-T Kariba) and Franco Ndambakuwa (ZANU PF - Magunje), were later released on the grounds that there was no proper legal framework to successful­ly prosecute them.

In 2014, it was reported that some 20 legislator­s were being investigat­ed for allegedly using CDF money to purchase personal assets such as motor vehicles and motorbikes.

Over the years the script has been more or less the same, pointing to a structural problem with the programme.

After 10 years, Parliament seems unable to fashion a working formula to make it work.

Critics of the programme have often pointed out prospects of conflict of interest on the part of legislator­s.

In essence, Parliament­arians’ core business entails making good laws, oversight, and representi­ng the interests of citizens. However, the CDF draws legislator­s into the role of budget implementa­tion.

This raises the prospect of compromisi­ng their oversight function.

We have a case where legislator­s are implementi­ng the national budget and at the same time playing watchdog over how the Executive implements the very same budget.

The fund has bred the unpleasant consequenc­e of legislator­s using the CDF benefits in exchange for electoral support, especially during election years.

All this points to something being fundamenta­lly wrong with the way the CDF is being administer­ed. When MPs do not find the incentive to apply for funds for developmen­tal projects in their areas, then something is wrong.

When public funds are diverted to personal use by legislator­s who later walk away scotfree, then the need for a rethink cannot be overemphas­ised.

Introducti­on of the CDF constituti­on which among other things places stringent requiremen­ts for MPs to access the funds and regular audit of books may not be enough.

It proposed some years ago that a CDF Bill could be the panacea to the problem bedevillin­g management of the fund, but not much has been said of the law for years now.

Other jurisdicti­ons have stringent regulatory measures in place to safeguard the integrity of the fund.

Zambia enacted the CDF Act two years ago, which set up robust management structures, guidelines for approval of projects, auditing mechanisms, service procuremen­t regulation­s and restrictio­ns on use of funds for non-fund purposes.

In Kenya, a similar law was passed in 2003 which compels the Finance Minister to set aside a portion of the national annual budget for the purposes of localised developmen­t, wealth creation and poverty eradicatio­n.

Zimbabwe needs similar legislativ­e regulation­s that compel MPs not only to access the funds but use them for common good and not for political expedience.

We need a law that compels Treasury to set aside funds annually for the purposes of localised developmen­t.

Given the push by Government towards devolution and decentrali­sation, the CDF is a key ingredient for the programme.

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