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Public
perceptions on Constitutional reform in Zimbabwe
Afrobarometer
March
2011
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Introduction
Ideally, a country's
constitution is that society's contract with its citizens and should
be an expression of the aspirations and values of the people. Zimbabwe's
constitution has a chequered history. It was crafted in London in
1979 as an elite ceasefire pact among warring parties and has been
amended no less than 19 times in 30 years. Few have regarded this
document as a national supreme law and many have agitated for its
replacement. The only concerted effort to craft a new social contract
was in 1999-2000 but it ended in a constitutional draft's rejection
in a February 2000 referendum. Civil society, through the National
Constitutional Assembly, produced its own "people-driven"
draft which however was not presented to the people for their verdict.
Then in September 2007, the three main political parties clandestinely
negotiated their own draft supreme law, the so-called Kariba
Draft which was quickly overtaken by the dynamics surrounding
the 2008
elections.
Efforts to write
a new constitution were revived during political dialogue between
Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) and
two wings of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The September
2008 pact among the three parties in a self-styled Global
Political Agreement (GPA) acknowledges that it "is the
fundamental right and duty of Zimbabwean people to make a constitution
by themselves and for themselves" (Article 6). The implementation
of the GPA gave birth to the so-called Inclusive Government established
in February 2009. A Constitution Parliamentary Select Committee
(COPAC) was set up subsequently to spearhead and shepherd a consultative
process resulting in a draft to be subjected to a referendum. In
fact, the constitution-making process is the flagship agenda item
in the GPA, the only Article in that elite pact that is time-framed
and to have been completed within an 18-month period of the life
of the coalition government. The Afrobarometer public opinion survey
of October 2010 included questions on the constitution as well and
the public consultation process and provides some insight into the
Zimbabwean public's views on constitutional reform.
The
Afrobarometer
The Afro-barometer is
a comparative series of public attitude surveys on democracy, governance,
markets and living conditions. It works through a collaborative
effort of researchers in select African countries. The October 2010
survey was based on a randomly selected national probability sample
of 1192 respondents representing a cross-section of adult Zimbabweans
aged 18 years or older. A sample of this size yields a margin of
error of ±3 percent at a 95 percent confidence level. All
interviews were conducted face-to-face by trained fieldworkers in
the language of the respondent's choice. Fieldwork for the Afrobarometer
Round 4.5 in Zimbabwe, on which this paper is mainly based, was
undertaken in Zimbabwe on 16-29 October 2010. Where appropriate,
reference to and comparisons with the findings in earlier Afrobarometer
surveys will be made in order to demonstrate trends.
At the time of the survey,
the COPAC-led process of gathering people's views was in the final
stages of completion except in the capital Harare where outreach
meetings had been suspended due to politically-motivated skirmishes.
This Afrobarometer bulletin focuses on perceptions of Zimbabweans
on constitutional reform in terms of both the process and the content.
Popular
Awareness and Sources of Information on the Constitution of Zimbabwe
The survey first
sought to find out if the respondents were aware of the current
constitution under which they are governed by asking if they had
"ever heard of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe". Apparently, popular awareness is impressively
high with exactly three quarters (75%) saying they were aware of
the existing constitution but the remaining quarter had not. Though
awareness was nationally spread, urban residents (81%) were more
aware than their rural counterparts (73%). A significant gender
gap in awareness also existed as more men (79%) than women (71%)
claimed awareness.
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