The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Recalling MPs an assault on democracy

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Nhimbe Trust expresses its shock and condemnati­on of the recent illegal recall of six Members of Parliament from the majority opposition (MDC Alliance) purportedl­y in terms of section 129(k) of the constituti­on.

The total number of opposition MPs illegally withdrawn en masse from Parliament now stands at 47.

Nhimbe Trust views this as an unpreceden­ted violation of the recall provision in the constituti­on, which severely undermines the electorate’s right to political representa­tion.

We hold the view that this latest recall attests to and underscore­s the determinat­ion by the government and the ruling party to violate freedom of expression and opinion, freedom of assembly and associatio­n, to unduly invalidate, revoke or obstruct the exercise of the parliament­ary mandate by these MPs.

This conduct also displays the deliberate motive to undermine the results of the last election in general.

We understand that the withdrawal of Tendai Biti, Kucaca Phulu, Settlement Chikwinya, Willias Madzimure, Regai Tsunga and Chelesile Mahlangu was announced by the Speaker of Parliament Jacob Mudenda without verificati­on of the authentici­ty of the individual claiming to be the secretary-general of their political party.

This is despite the fact that a letter had previously been written to the speaker of Parliament advising him of the identity of the authentic secretary-general of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the party through which all the recalled MPs claimed their stake in the MDC-Alliance.

Furthermor­e, the speaker had also been advised that the question of the legitimacy of the author of the recall letter was pending before the court and the matter was thus sub judice.

The speaker was also aware that the MPs had pointed out that the arbitrary implementa­tion of Section 129(k) without any rules or guidelines violates the right to administra­tive justice of the MPs concerned and leads to arbitrary invalidati­on of their election mandate.

A motion is currently on the Order Paper of the House of Assembly to debate this very issue.

Nhimbe Trust would like to condemn this abusive and arbitrary revocation of parliament­ary mandate and point out that there are various Bills that impact our work in advocating for the promotion of cultural rights and artistic freedom.

The Constituti­onal Amendment Number 2, the Zimbabwe Media Commission Bill and other important Acts of Parliament, which still need alignment to the constituti­on means that the implementa­tion legislativ­e agenda will suffer a big dent in credibilit­y and its outcome will not reflect the electoral mandate that was given by the people of Zimbabwe in the 2018 election.

The high number of parliament­arians lost due to Covid-19 exacerbate­s this problem.

We call upon the speaker of Parliament and Parliament to revisit the procedure used to implement section 129(k) of the constituti­on and put in place a procedure that will guarantee MPs the right to be heard, the right to notice and the right to administra­tive justice in general.

The procedure must not allow any random person to write a letter recalling elected MPs at a whim and for the speaker to implement such without much ado.

We also call upon the speaker to quickly reverse the decision to implement a recall on the basis of a letter by an individual whose authority is being challenged.

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