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Zim
civil groups reject SA's suggestions on constitutional reform
Tererai Karimakwenda,
SW Radio Africa
August 15, 2007
http://www.swradioafrica.com/news150807/zimcivil150807.htmb
Zimbabwean civil organisations
that met with a South African team of facilitators in Pretoria on
Tuesday report that they strongly opposed the idea of using Zimbabwe's
parliament to reform the constitution, ahead of the elections next
year. The groups met with President Thabo Mbeki's chief negotiator
Sydney Mufamadi and Mbeki's advisor on legal matters Advocate
Gumbi.
Washington Katema,
coordinator of the Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU), participated in this consultative
process on behalf of youth groups in Zimbabwe. Katema said Advocate
Gumbi raised the constitutional issue, saying the all-stakeholders
approach to reform that the groups and Zimbabwe's opposition
are insisting on had failed in 1999 and was a sheer waste of time
and resources. Instead, she suggested that Zimbabwe adopt the South
African model where parliament is turned into a constitutional assembly
with the mandate to make amendments.
Constitutional amendments
made by parliament would not be acceptable to most Zimbabweans and
both factions of the MDC insist they will not participate in any
election unless there is a new people-driven constitution. This
has been one of their major demands during the SADC initiated talks
mediated by President Mbeki.
Katema said: "We
vehemently opposed this and insisted that Zimbabweans want a people-driven
constitution. We all know that parliament does not represent the
majority of Zimbabweans." The objections do not guarantee
anything because the facilitation team was there in a consultative
role only. Zimbabwe's civil groups have no participatory role
in the Mbeki mediated talks but Katema explained that the process
in Pretoria Tuesday opened doors and avenues of communication for
the civil organisations.
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