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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 95
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
October 10, 2012
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Plan
To Usurp Copac A Recipe For National Disaster
Media reports
that indicate that Principals in the inclusive
government met and agreed to side-step Copac and take over the
constitution
making process are disturbing to all sundry. In as much as some
of the media reports are sensational, a finer balanced analysis
would convincingly reveal that:
(1) The Principals,
President Robert Mugabe, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and Deputy
Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara met without Welshman Ncube and discussed
the possibility of usurping Copac in the process
(2) the Principals
could not substantively agree without seeking legal advice
(3) As a consequence,
the Principals invited Patrick Chinamasa and Erick Matinenga to
seek legal opinion
(4) The legal
advisors could not agree as Chinamasa was for whereas Matinenga
was unequivocally against the usurpation of Copac.
The sober conclusion
one draws is that the Principals did not conclude the matter. However,
one cannot deny the Principals harbour ambitions to stage a Copac
'coup' but nothing is cast in stone yet. However this
is a clarion call for democrats to apply pressure on the powers
that be visa vis the democratic route to a new democratic constitution.
The advice should be clear that what the Principals are seeking
to do is a clear abrogation of the GPA
and an affront to Parliament
and other stakeholders. They are literally trying to rewrite and
renegotiate the GPA. For the GPA in article 6 is clear that:
1) the draft
Constitution and the accompanying Report shall be tabled before
Parliament within 1 month of the second All Stakeholders Conference;
2) the draft
Constitution and the accompanying Report shall be debated in Parliament
and the debate concluded within one month;
3) the draft
Constitution emerging from Parliament shall be gazetted before the
holding of a referendum;
4) a referendum
on the new draft Constitution shall be held within 3 months of the
conclusion of the debate The above procedure gives no space for
Principals to amend the constitution. Why then should the Principals
seek to subvert this process? It is obvious that the person who
is initiating this idea is President Robert Mugabe, who finds himself
in a quandary, under fire from hardliners within his party after
he connived with the Copac team to embrace reforms in the draft
constitution. President Mugabe needs a gateway to amend the draft
and factor in changes to appease his radical wing and manage factional
politics in his party ahead of the crucial general election. Being
the Machiavelli that he has always been, the President is masking
dishonesty, trying to collectively lobby the Principals that they
will get an equal opportunity, as the executive, to revisit certain
aspects that they might not be happy with in the Copac draft
constitution. This might be tempting to other Principals but the
consequences will be disastrous for the nation. If there are matters
of principle that either Principal is not happy with, which are
against the values and aspirations of their political parties, they
can use the Parliament, where they have enough representation to
push forward their positions. That will be more transparent, more
democratic and in line with the GPA under the guarantor of SADC.
Anything threesome is synonymous with broad-day-light coup and risk
threatening the constitution.
It should be clear to the Principals that the constitution making
process is a hot political potato and to get where it is; there
has been a lot of compromise from various quarters. The Principals
must therefore show collective leadership and wisdom in dealing
with this very delicate process. Their intentions to usurp the Copac
process will threaten the constitution making process and erode
its legitimacy to the marrow.
The trio must
realise people have compromised to let Copac drive the process,
albeit deep seated concerns and people have compromised to participate
for the sake of taking the nation toward the next step in the transition
but that is not meant to signal people can be taken for granted.
Any attempts by the Principals to take people for granted might
be the final nail on the constitution. Some stakeholders like the
NCA have since
abandoned this process. Civil society will be frustrated, SADC will
frown and other political parties will charge on, setting the stage
for the 'constitution waterloo battle'.
It is time for
other more reasonable Principals to reign in the President and alert
him that the days of unilateral executive powers and authoritarian
spasms are gone unless the other Principals are prepared to be tainted
with the same brush and definitely history and posterity will judge
them harshly. However, with enough civic and regional political
pressure I believe common-sense and logic will prevail over suicidal
positions.
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