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Political parties taking Zimbabwean for a ride
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
October 15, 2010
The Constitution
Parliament Select Committee (COPAC) indefinitely postoponed outreach
meetings scheduled for the 16th and 17th of October in Harare citing
financial constraines. The Herald (14 October 2010) in an article
entitled "Outstanding COPAC meetings postponed", quoted
COPAC Co-Chairperson, Honorable Paul Mangwana, saying , ""the
meetings have been postponed until further notice . . . until COPAC
receives further resources from the Treasury". The new timelines
announced late last week have been flouted.
Sources within COPAC have however indicated that
the postponement was also as a result of squabbles between political
parties on how many meetings should be redobe in Harare with ZANU
PF saying that less than 40 meetings were disrupted while Movement
for Democratic Change argued that 68 meetings were actually disrupted.
The decision by COPAC to postpone the remaining
outreach meetings does not come as a surprise to many as the whole
process has fallen short of the basic requirements of a democratic
and people-centered process. The infighting among the political
parties vindicates concerns by civil society organizations at the
onset of the constitution making process that the government was
an illegitimate body to run the process and that an independent
body was more appropriate.
Political parties especially Zanu PF have further
discredited the process by instigating violence against innocent
civilians, limiting citizen participation. Zanu PF has gone further
as to sell its party position to people with those who do not agree
falling prey to the party's unrepentant thugs. Such a process
cannot be regarded a s people-driven. The process has turned into
a political sham bereft of any values of a democratic process freely
owned and driven by ordinary citizens.
Some of the fundamentals of popular participation
in constitution making are social inclusion, personal security and
freedom of expression and assembly. The United Nations Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) Article 25 establishes the
right to participate in public affairs, to vote and to take part
in all national processes. This means people should own the process
and to an extent lead the process. The contrary, the process has
been hijacked by the powerful politicians and their violent followers.
So far, what has been witnessed in Zimbabwe's
constitutional reform process is exactly what a constitution making
exercise should not be. In Harare and Chitungwiza on the 18th of
September 2010, people's fundamental right to participate
and feel secure after participating was not realized. Residents
of these areas were coerced, harassed, threatened, intimidated,
beaten, instructed what to and what not to say while one activist
in Mbare, Crispen Mandizvidza even list his life, all in the name
of writing a democratic and people centered constitution. The level
of violence was astronomical and shameful that one person in Chitungwiza
even pulled out a gun at other participants.
The environment attendant to the making of truly democratic and
people driven constitution should be peaceful and stable. That political
environment was and is absent. Zimbabwe has toxic political environment
acerbated by the legacy of ZANU PF culture of impunity that the
Inclusive government has failed to curtail. I order to avoid repeating
history and going for a "No Vote", the process needs
to be done in a manner that respects the fundamental civil and political
liberties of citizens. A democratic constitution I n longer simply
one that establishes democratic governance but one that is made
in a democratic process
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in Zimbabwe fact
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