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Zimbabwe
weighs constitutional changes
Angus Shaw,
Associated Press
June 09, 2007
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/09/africa/AF-GEN-Zimbabwe-Constitutional-Changes.php
Zimbabwe's government
has proposed constitutional
amendments on electoral policy and the creation of a human rights
commission, steps critics say are designed to mask abuses and strengthen
President Robert Mugabe's hold on power.
The proposed rights commission
would have 16 members drawn from names compiled by Mugabe and the
ruling party-dominated parliament, according to an official notice
available on Saturday.
Human rights groups and
Mugabe critics have called the proposed commission a likely smoke
screen for his democratic and human rights abuses. However the government
says it was designed following U.N. recommendations.
Mugabe's government has
been clamping down on the opposition, fearing a worsening economic
crisis could spark an uprising. Annual inflation is running at 3,714
percent - the highest in the world - and there are acute shortages
of hard currency, gasoline, food and most other basic goods.
The amendments bill also
has provisions for holding parliamentary and presidential elections
at the same time in March, and for increasing the number of seats
in the House of Assembly from 150 to 210 and in the Senate from
66 to 84.
To hold the elections
simultaneously, the bill proposes shortening the terms of the president
and parliament from six years to five.
Mugabe has said holding
legislative and presidential elections together would minimize ballot
costs. Critics have called it a tactic to entrench the ruling party's
hold over the legislature by shortening the existing assembly's
term by two years.
The current House of
Assembly, in which the opposition holds 40 seats, was elected amid
allegations of violence, intimidation and vote rigging.
The bill, scheduled to
be debated by parliament next month, also proposes carving up several
constituencies to form new voting districts.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change has accused the government of changing district
boundaries to undermine opposition strongholds. The government insists
constituencies are too large for incumbent lawmakers to manage their
affairs.
The amendments also would
reduce the number of lawmakers appointed by Mugabe to the enlarged
lower house from 30 to 10. But it increases the number of senators
he would name from 16 to 34.
If Mugabe defeats the
fractured opposition in presidential elections next year, he would
hold on to power until 2013 when he will be nearly 90. The 83-year-old
has been Zimbabwe's only ruler since independence from Britain in
1980.
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