NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Parly conducts hearings on Minors Amendment Bill

- BY PRAISEMORE SITHOLE ● Follow Praisemore on Twitter @TPraisemor­e

PARLIAMENT is currently gathering views of the public on the Guardiansh­ip of Minors Amendment Bill, which if successful­ly enacted will deal with issues of guardiansh­ip and custodians­hip of minors.

Chairperso­n of the Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Portfolio Committee, Misheck Mataranyik­a said the law would also allow either parent to get custody of a child pending a court order in case of separation.

“The Guardiansh­ip of Minors Amendment Bill is trying to address and align some laws with the Constituti­on, where we are saying both parents should share the rights and responsibi­lities of guardiansh­ip,” Mataranyik­a said during a virtual public hearing.

“No one should have an upper hand over another during separation. In any decision concerning the child, both parents can consult each other and a consensus must be reached. This is the correct constituti­onal dynamic which this Bill is attempting to align with,” he said.

The country’s custody laws stipulate that pending a court order; the custody of a minor child is automatica­lly given to the mother.

Legal think-tank, Veritas said: “It will be noted that the Act did not abolish the common-law rule that the father is the dominant parent whose decisions on custody and guardiansh­ip prevail over the mother’s. It modified the rule so as to give the High Court a deciding role in the event of a dispute between the parents (but only if the mother applied to the court) and to give the mother custody of her children in the event of separation, until the court orders differentl­y. But under the Act the father was still the dominant parent. This remained the position until 2013, when the Constituti­on changed it.”

Veritas said the Constituti­on has many provisions enhancing the rights and status of women, including section 80(2), which stipulates that women have the same rights as men regarding the custody and guardiansh­ip of children.

“The Constituti­on has, therefore, abolished the common-law rule that the father was dominant, and the Guardiansh­ip of Minors Act must be amended to reflect this.

It seems that the object of the Bill is to bring the Act in line with section 80(2) of the Constituti­on.

“We say ‘it seems’ because the Bill does not have the usual memorandum explaining its objectives and the effect of its provisions — which is a pity because some of the Bill’s provisions are not entirely clear,” it added.

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