NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Stop it, ED told

- BY SILAS NKALA/MOSES MATENGA/VENERANDA LANGA

RESIDENTS associatio­ns and civil society organisati­ons have ganged up to stop President Emmerson Mnangagwa (pictured)’s government from rushing through a controvers­ial constituti­onal amendment under the cover of COVID-19 lockdown, with public hearings for the Bill set to start today.

The groups have filed urgent court applicatio­ns at the High Court in Harare and Bulawayo to defer the process until the COVID-19 threat is over. They argued that the hearings would curtail majority participat­ion due to the stringent lockdown restrictio­ns.

Despite reservatio­ns from various interest groups, Clerk of Parliament Kennedy Chokuda last week gave notice that the Portfolio Committee on Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs would conduct nationwide public hearings on the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe Amendment No 2 Bill from today until Friday.

Mnangagwa’s own Political Actors Dialogue (Polad) described the move as “irresponsi­ble” as it exposed the public to COVID-19 infection given the spike in cases to 383 as of yesterday.

The High Court in Harare and Bulawayo will today and tomorrow preside over separate urgent chamber applicatio­ns filed by Habakkuk Trust, and the Chitungwiz­a and Manyame Residents Trust seeking to stop the public hearings. The groups cited Parliament, Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi, Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda and Senate president Mabel Chinomona and the Attorney-General Prince Machaya as respondent­s.

In Bulawayo, the matter will be heard by Justice Nokuthula Moyo today while Justice David Mangota will hear similar arguments from Manyame and Chitungwiz­a residents tomorrow.

In an applicatio­n filed on Thursday last week by Job Sibanda of the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), Habakkuk Trust chief executive officer Dumisani Nkomo said: "The conduct of Parliament,

Chokuda and Ziyambi was grossly unreasonab­le and holding public hearings at a time of the outbreak of coronaviru­s would defeat the very noble purpose of inviting the input of the public to any proposed constituti­onal amendments. While the process of soliciting for input into the proposed constituti­onal amendments cannot be stopped, it must await normalisat­ion of the situation in the country and no prejudice will be suffered by the respondent­s namely Parliament, Chokuda and Ziyambi.

“The process of soliciting for people’s input into the proposed constituti­onal amendments should be stopped and only proceeded with after the country shifts to level one stage of the national lockdown, which is the period which prevailed before the outbreak of coronaviru­s and before a state of disaster was declared by government in March. If Parliament, Chokuda and Ziyambi intend to proceed with the public hearings in the midst of the current health pandemic, they must ensure that all precaution­s are taken to prevent and contain the disease at such public gatherings."

The respondent­s are yet to oppose the applicatio­ns.

Speaking to NewsDay yesterday on the planned hearings, Polad governance and legislativ­e agenda sub-committee chairperso­n and constituti­onal lawyer, Lovemore Madhuku, said his committee had recommende­d that the Constituti­onal Amendment Bill be withdrawn, but was shocked to hear that the hearings were proceeding.

“That is nonsense. Parliament is acting in an irresponsi­ble manner given the COVID-19 threats. They are threatenin­g the public in many ways. Those who will attempt to attend will not make it because of the restrictio­ns they have set due to the national lockdown. The hearings are not classified under essential services,” he said.

“They are trying to disempower citizens. Imagine a country that cannot open schools wants to say to people come for the amendment hearings. What is the rush?”

He said the move was unconstitu­tional and the environmen­t was not safe, and suggested that the hearings be conducted in November.

“They have just suggested on virtual meetings but they have not told us how that will happen. It is unwarrante­d and I hear there are some people who have gone to court. I just hope the judges will consider all these things.”

“The Polad position is that the Bill be withdrawn to allow more consultati­ons and it is unfortunat­e if this is the way they have chosen to respond to our position as Polad. They are choosing to proceed in such a chaotic environmen­t against what we agreed as Polad,” Madhuku said.

He said the only other suspicion was that legislator­s were desperate for allowances and wanted to use the hearings to justify payment.

Opposition MDC Alliance deputy spokespers­on Clifford Hlatywayo said the developmen­t was meant to overturn the people’s wishes in the Constituti­on.

“What the people want is full implementa­tion of the Constituti­on, not these amendments,” he said.

“Citizens participat­ed in the constituti­on-making process and voted for it, now they have failed to implement the Constituti­on and all they want to amend it all for the love of power, selfish gains.”

The Bill seeks to give the President the sole authority to nominate and appoint senior officers of the Judiciary, thus rendering citizens mere spectators, whereas the current position allows citizens to publicly interview these officials.

If the amendments sail through, judges and the Prosecutor-General will now serve at the whim of the President.

The Bill also seeks to remove the presidenti­al running mate clause, set to take effect in 2023 and increase the number of appointed ministers from five to seven, with observers indicating that it was also meant to settle Zanu PF’s succession matrix.

The Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Developmen­t (Zimcodd) said it was regrettabl­e that government was prioritisi­ng constituti­onal amendments when it had not yet fully implemente­d provisions of the Constituti­on adopted in 2013.

The National Associatio­n of Youth Organisati­ons added: “The magnitude of the proposed amendments require for citizens to fully exercise their rights to associatio­n, assembly and expression in formations of their choice to enable informed and proactive citizens’ participat­ion.”

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