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New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Audit the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) urges Hurungwe and
Karoi residents
Centre
for Community Development in Zimbabwe (CCDZ)
May 24, 2011
Residents of
Hurungwe and Karoi in Mashonaland West province have called for
auditing of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) which they say
was abused by parliamentarians. "We are calling on the Inclusive
government to audit the funds disbursed to MPs. Some of the
MPs did not consult with us and projects were implemented secretly
and selectively to benefit those wards considered supportive of
the MP", said one participant. The participant was speaking
at a community dialogue meeting that was organized by The Centre
for Community Development in Zimbabwe in Hurungwe. The community
dialogue meeting was one in a series of similar meetings that are
held by the CCDZ to educate the public on the referendum and preparation
for elections. The meetings also bring together political leaders
such as councilors and traditional leaders to meet with their constituencies
to discuss about local level politics and how to build and promote
peace and political tolerance.
Residents in
Hurungwe and Karoi voiced their dissatisfaction over the poor service
delivery they experience at the hands of their local councils. They
said any developments in their areas did not come from consultations
with them but were foisted upon them against their wishes. Grinding
mills instead of boreholes were given as an example of such imposed
development in Hurungwe and participants from all three areas claimed
they had never heard of the Constituency Development Fund which
is meant to benefit their areas following wide-ranging consultations
between elected leadership and residents. Residents further voiced
that they were not called for consultative or feed back meetings
by their local councilors or MPs, with some declaring they did not
even know who their representatives were.
Participants also expressed disappointment at the rampant lack of
information and feedback on the Constitution-Making process. They
made reference to COPAC consultations not being adequately publicized
in their communities and were concerned on the correctness of the
views they gave to COPAC, even describing the process as secretive.
"The politicians are taking us for granted. They are now advertising
the Thematic
Committees and yet they failed to do the same with the most
critical public outreach phase," said one participant.
Participants at all three meetings were adamant that it was premature
to hold elections in 2011 as the Global
Political Agreement was yet to be fully implemented and that
a new Constitution was a pre-requisite for holding the polls. The
new Constitution was seen as a guarantee of sorts from preventing
the return of widespread politically motivated violence as a precursor
to polls and would also prevent the formation of another Government
of National Unity. Communities also decried the lack of access to
national identity documents which they would need to register as
voters. They told CCDZ of being sent in circles by their local Registrar-General's
office and that they fear they will not be able to vote in the Referendum
or elections as a result of not having ID documents. National healing
also came to the fore in the meetings with participants proposing
that village heads and churches should lead the process and not
politicians who benefitted from the political upheavals that tore
communities apart during the 2008
election period. Village heads who attended meetings in Hurungwe
also called for the new Constitution to be in place before the elections
saying that would 'level the ground'.
Participants
urged civic society organizations to maintain active ties in communities
and keep them abreast with development in the country and urged
CCDZ to continue to visit with more activities that would equip
them to participate more effectively in national processes.
Visit the Centre
for Community Development fact
sheet
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