The Citizen (Gauteng)

Committee agrees on process

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Parliament’s rules committee has agreed on a process that the national assembly must follow if it were to remove a sitting president in terms of section 89 of the constituti­on.

The committee adopted the rules unanimousl­y and has recommende­d that they be approved by the National Assembly, a spokespers­on for parliament said yesterday.

Though the constituti­on provides for the sacking of a president by parliament in two different manners in two different sections, it did not have an establishe­d process for dealing with that in section 89 where it happens through a substantiv­e motion.

Under the rules adopted by MPs this week, any member of the National Assembly can bring a substantiv­e motion calling for the removal of the president in terms of this section.

The speaker then has to refer the motion, plus any supporting evidence, to a panel of three independen­t legal experts who must asses if there is enough grounds for parliament to proceed with an inquiry against the president.

It had been moot whether the members of this panel should be independen­t or members of parliament.

Under the new rules, the speaker will consult with political parties represente­d in the assembly before appointing the panel.

The panel must function “impartiall­y and without fear, favour or prejudice”, the committee said, and conclude its deliberati­ons within 30 days and then report to the National Assembly.

Members of the chamber must then decide whether to proceed with an inquiry, and if so, this must be done by a specially constitute­d impeachmen­t committee.

The committee must establish the veracity of the charges against the president and again make a recommenda­tion to the National Assembly.

“Once the impeachmen­t committee has reported, the house must schedule the report for debate and decision at a house sitting with due urgency. If the report recommends that a president be removed from office, the question must be put to a vote,” parliament said.

Two thirds of the members of the house must vote in favour in order for the president to be removed from office.

In terms of section 89, the grounds of removal are a serious violation of the constituti­on or the law, serious misconduct or inability to perform the functions of office.

The rules committee began work on these rules while former president Jacob Zuma was in office but did not finalise them. – ANA

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