The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Parly in historic move to new home

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Debra Matabvu

LESS than a year before the centenary anniversar­y of the first sitting of the Rhodesian Legislativ­e Assembly at the then Legislativ­e Assembly Building in Salisbury (now Harare), Parliament of Zimbabwe is relocating to a new home.

On May 30, 1924, the Rhodesian legislatur­e — then made up of just 30 all-white male members — sat for the first time inside the famous building that was initially a hotel.

That sitting marked the commenceme­nt of a parliament­ary governance system in the country.

Before this, Rhodesia, a British colony, was ruled by a British governor.

However, in 1923, the country was granted responsibl­e government status, which meant that it could govern itself internally.

The first elections for the Rhodesian parliament were held in 1924, and the parliament was inaugurate­d on May 30 the same year.

Records show that two Scottish settlers, who had emigrated into the country, acquired land to build a hotel where Parliament currently sits.

They named it Cecil Hotel after the adjacent Cecil Square (now Africa Unity Square).

They later sold the building to the British South Africa Company (BSAC), which converted it into an administra­tive centre and governed the colony from there.

It was only after granting of the responsibl­e government status to the colony that the building was converted into the country’s seat of parliament.

Now, around seven months shy of that historic first sitting, Parliament, albeit of an independen­t Zimbabwe, is moving to a new home in Mt Hampden.

Ironically, historic records show that the Pioneer Column — the initial group of settlers sent to Zimbabwe by the BSAC in 1890 to colonise the country — intended to settle in Mt Hampden as the colony’s capital.

They later settled around what is present-day Harare.

In what is being touted as a historic developmen­t in the country’s quest to decolonise its governing institutio­ns, nearly hundred years after the initial sitting of the colonial legislatur­e, the seat of Parliament will later this month move away from Harare.

Observers see the relocation of Parliament to Mt Hampden as a symbolic, yet important, break from the country’s colonial past.

Parliament is moving to a multi-million-dollar state-of-the-art facility perched atop a hill in the picturesqu­e farming area, where authoritie­s plan to develop Zimbabwe’s new capital city.

On Tuesday, the 10th Parliament of Zimbabwe will convene its first session at the new facility, ahead of permanent relocation later this month.

In an interview with The Sunday Mail, Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affair Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said: “We just requested the Chinese to use the premises for the official opening and State of the Nation address by President Mnangagwa (on Tuesday).

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (and Internatio­nal Trade) and the Chinese Embassy are organising a handover ceremony — most likely in October — and thereafter, Parliament will move permanentl­y to Mt Hampden.

“Once the handover is done, Parliament will move.”

Zimbabwe’s first Speaker of Parliament Mr Didymus Mutasa said relocation of the August House was long overdue.

He served as Speaker between 1980 and 1990.

“It is very significan­t that the country has its own infrastruc­ture that is divorced from our erstwhile colonial masters,” he said.

“We inherited the Parliament building from the colonisers, so we basically inherited the set-up as well as their dressing . . . we basically replicated everything they did. During our first sessions after Independen­ce, we did not know anything about Parliament business; we were only guided by the love of being able to represent our people.

“So the new building will now mean that we are slowly divorcing ourselves from our colonisers, and that is very important.”

Zimbabwe’s new Parliament building is located in Mt Hampden, about 20 kilometres west of Harare. It was designed by the Chinese company Shanghai Constructi­on Group and built by a Chinese constructi­on consortium.

The works began in November 2018 and were completed in April 2022.

The building cost nearly US$200 million to build, which was funded by a grant from the Chinese government.

It is six storeys high and can accommodat­e up to 650 legislator­s.

The building is equipped with stateof-the-art technology and is designed to be accessible to all Zimbabwean­s.

 ?? ?? President Mnangagwa delivers his State of the Nation Address at the new Parliament building earlier this year
President Mnangagwa delivers his State of the Nation Address at the new Parliament building earlier this year
 ?? ?? Rhodesian governor Sir Humprey Gibbs addresses Parliament in 1965
Rhodesian governor Sir Humprey Gibbs addresses Parliament in 1965

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