NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mudenda, MPs roast Executive for underminin­g Parly

- BY VENERANDA LANGA

SPEAKER of Parliament Jacob Mudenda and opposition legislator­s yesterday took turns to grill Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi for allowing members of the Executive to take legislativ­e business lightly, including tabling outdated reports without seeking condonatio­n of the House.

The House questioned the lack of seriousnes­s by ministers and commission­s set up under chapter 12. This was after Women Affairs minister

Sithembiso Nyoni sought leave in the National Assembly to table the Zimbabwe Gender Commission reports for the years 2015 to 2019.

Zengeza West MP Job Sikhala (MDC Alliance) fired the first shot, quizzing her for tabling the reports late without seeking condonatio­n from Parliament.

“The Constituti­on is very clear in terms of building democracy — that the Executive must table annual reports before Parliament and it cannot be taken for granted that these reports should have been considered during their material time,” Sikhala said.

“We expect Nyoni to first seek condonatio­n on the 2015 outdated reports because what she is doing is to take Parliament for granted by not first seeking condonatio­n to say she failed to comply with the Constituti­on.”

Ziyambi then sprung to Nyoni’s defence, saying: “I am at pains in understand­ing the procedure. If she had not come to table the reports in retrospect, was Parliament going to keep quiet? The minister came on her own volition and there is no procedure in our statutes that when you are late in tabling reports, you seek condonatio­n.”

Mudenda shot Ziyambi down, reminding him that section 323(1) of the Constituti­on obliges all commission to submit their annual reports to Parliament through their responsibl­e ministers, not later than the end of March in the year to which the report relates.

“Minister (Ziyambi) you are misdirecte­d here. It is your responsibi­lity to ensure that ministers submit these reports and we have several reports pending. You are guilty,” he said.

“Section 107(2) also states that ‘Every Vice-President, minister and deputy minister must attend Parliament and parliament­ary committees in order to answer questions concerning matters for which he or she is collective­ly or individual­ly responsibl­e’.

“If there is derelictio­n of duty, then you have to seek condonatio­n. If my ruling is unacceptab­le, please go to the Constituti­onal Court.”

Mbizo MP Settlement Chikwinya (MDC Alliance) said there were a number of commission reports of several years ago that were still to be tabled before Parliament.

“As a result, Cyclone Idai was debated six months after it happened when the issue was already outdated,” Chikwinya said.

Norton MP Temba Mliswa (independen­t) blasted parliament­ary portfolio committees for failing to bring truant ministers to book.

Meanwhile, Finance minister Mthuli Ncube will today meet MPs to discuss their welfare after they complained that their salaries have been eroded by inflation.

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