NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Parly gathers public views on PVO Bill

- BY CATHERINE MUCHIRI/HARRIET CHIKANDIWA ⬤ Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

PARLIAMENT will next week gather views from the public on the Public Voluntary Organisati­on (PVO) Amendment Bill which has been condemned as oppressive by critics.

The European Union (EU) early this week said the PVO Bill was one of the reasons sanctions on Zimbabwe were renewed.

It was gazetted in November 2021 and seeks to amend the PVO Act.

Critics have said the Bill has the effect of criminalis­ing the work of civic society organisati­ons (CSOs) in Zimbabwe by proposing harsh penalties, including jail terms of up to a year for breach of its provisions.

It will also give government and the minister responsibl­e for CSOs and trusts excessive power and interferen­ce on non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs) operations.

The NGOs will also be required to disclose their sources of foreign funding.

The Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare said “virtual hearings will be available on selected radio stations” on the sidelines of public hearings.

CSOs feel that the Bill will restrict their work, violate human rights and affect communitie­s that depend on the work of PVOs.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum with support of 190 civil society organisati­ons and coalitions is leading a #StopThePVO­Bill campaign to garner support to stop the amendments from sailing through.

In a statement, the Institute for Young Women’s Developmen­t said the PVO Bill would make CSOs susceptibl­e to the heavy-handedness of the State ahead of the 2023 general elections and further stifle good governance and human rights agenda.

The Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP) said many people in the country would be exposed to extreme poverty by restrictin­g foreign funding if the amendments sail through.

“By paralysing local CSOs through heavy registrati­on requiremen­ts, the Bill paralyses humanitari­an work. Thousands of families depend on food aid from NGOs,” ZPP said in a statement.

It also said a lot of foreign currency would be lost as donors divert humanitari­an aid to countries that respect human rights. “Loss of foreign currency means shortages of fuel, medication and other important things that our country buys from outside using foreign currency,” ZPP said.

The Parliament­ary Legal Committee is currently scrutinisi­ng the Bill to ascertain its constituti­onality.

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