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Creative
civil society mounts arts and culture advocacy campaign
Zimbabwe Creative Civil Society's Plan of Action
for Arts and Culture
June 08, 2012
From the 28th
of April to the 30th of May, 14 arts and culture practitioners and
activists participated in a training workshop in Harare on tools
for advocacy and lobbying for the arts and culture sector. The training,
which was hosted by Nhimbe Trust with funding from ProHelvetia and
technical support from Arterial Network, was one of the first major
steps in the implementation of the Zimbabwe Creative Civil Society's
3 year Plan of Action on the arts and culture formulated in 2011.
In the plan of action the Steering Committee tasked Nhimbe
Trust to undertake training of arts and culture practitioners
and activists in advocacy and lobbying. The training workshop was
attended by a carefully selected team of arts and culture practitioners
and activists from Harare and Bulawayo to ensure that participants
would begin to promote a culture of rights based advocacy and lobbying.
In order to
put together all the issues that would be the main subjects of the
arts and culture advocacy and lobbying campaign, Nhimbe Trust commissioned
researchers who produced reports on the following:
1. Cultural
Governance in Zimbabwe
2. The National
Arts Council of Zimbabwe Act: Application and implications to the
arts and culture sector
3. National
Arts Council's Festival Guidelines
4. National
Gallery of Zimbabwe Act
5. Censorship
Act and its application to the arts and culture sectors
6. The Broadcasting
Services Act
7. Implementation
of the 7 UNESCO Conventions in the field of culture.
Research in
the seven areas of immediate concerns was undertaken from 1st March
to 24th May by Florence Makanga-Majachani, Pathisa Nyathi, Stephen
Chifunyise, Dr. Jacob Mapara, Nehemiah Chivandikwa, Eric Mazango,
Ngonidzashe Muwonwa and Dr. Shumirai Nyota. Another researcher was
commissioned to analyze the research reports in order to pick from
each report, research findings and recommendations that would constitute
the content of the workshop.
Facilitated
by Stephen Chifunyise and Sharlene Versfeld, the workshop aimed
at equipping arts and culture practitioners and activists with tools
to analyze the legal, fiscal, institutional and administrative issues
impacting on the performance of the arts and culture sector in Zimbabwe.
The workshop was also intended to create an opportunity for participants
to understand how the creative civil society can contribute to solving
challenges to the performance of the arts and culture sector and
also to up-skill the arts and culture practitioners and activists
with practical tools to conduct advocacy programmes in the arts
and culture sector.
In the first
part of the workshop, research findings and recommendations of the
researchers were discussed. Participants agreed on issues, which
were to be prioritized as the content for advocacy and lobbying
campaign. This exercise was premised on issues the arts and culture
practitioners and activists considered as impacting on efforts to
grow a vibrant and viable arts and culture sector in Zimbabwe -
issues which needed to be attended to urgently in order to remove
obstacles to the development of the arts and culture.
The following
were the issues the participants prioritized:
1. Advocacy
for the creation of a stand alone ministry of arts and culture and
the establishment of a government resourced national arts fund.
2. Advocacy
for a heritage month and the identification and promotion of national
contacts points for UNESCO conventions in the field of culture which
Zimbabwe ratified.
3. Review of
policy on registration of arts and culture organizations with the
National Arts Council and advocacy for amendments of the National
Arts Council of Zimbabwe Act
4. Advocacy
for urgent amendments of the National Arts Council Festival Guidelines
5. Advocacy
for amendments of the Censorship and Entertainment Act
6. Advocacy
for the amendment of the National Gallery Act
7. Review of
and clarification on the 75% local content policy and advocacy for
the amendment of the Broadcasting Services Act.
At the end of
the workshop, the participants constituted themselves into the National
Plan of Action on Arts and Culture Advocacy and Lobbying Team (NPAAC
Advocacy and Lobbying Team) comprising of the following:.
Raisedon Baya,
Peter Churu, Virginia Phiri, Victor Moyo, Nyaradzo Mutonhori, Michael
Mabwe, Jane Parsons, Daniel Maposa, Value Dick, Stephen Chifunyise
and Josh Nyapimbi. The NPAAC Advocacy and Lobbying Team proceeded
to produce a short term arts and culture advocacy plan of action
limited to the following areas:
1. Cultural
Governance in Zimbabwe.
The NPAAC Advocacy
and Lobbying team will advocate for the creation of a stand alone
ministry of arts and culture. The current segmentation of various
departments and statutory bodies that incubate arts and culture
portfolios in different ministries has led to incoherent formulation
and implementation of cultural policies and policy actions and an
uncoordinated development of the arts and culture sector.
2. National
Arts Council Festival Guidelines
The team will
advocate for user friendly NACZ Festival Guidelines. The current
guidelines infringe on the rights and freedom of expression of artists
and arts organisations and stall the growth and development of the
arts sector by making it difficult for artists and arts organisations
to organize and run their festivals. The guidelines should be amended
and made user-friendly.
3. National
Arts Council of Zimbabwe Act
The team will
advocate for the urgent amendment of the National Arts Council of
Zimbabwe Act. The current Act is outdated. It has not been reviewed
and amended since it was promulgated in 1985 inspite of the tremendous
developments that have taken place in the arts sector. The National
Arts Council of Zimbabwe should be an arts development organ rather
a mere regulator. Amending the Act is necessary to transform the
National Arts Council of Zimbabwe into a transparent, accountable,
well resourced and accessible arts development organ.
The NPAAC Steering
Committee is convinced that the media has a crucial role to play
as the most important channel of making the stakeholders in the
arts and culture and policy makers aware of the critical actions
that should be taken to grow a vibrant and viable arts and culture
sector in Zimbabwe.
This is why
the NPAAC Advocacy and Lobbying team has committed itself to regular
dialogue with the media on the implementation of its Advocacy and
Lobbying Plan of Action and the Zimbabwe Creative Civil Society's
3 Year Plan of Action on Arts and Culture, which we are making available
to all members of the press present here this morning.
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