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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Zimbabwe
MP numbers overwhelm Parliament
Farai Shoko, Mail and Guardian (SA)
September 06, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-09-06-00-zimbabwe-mp-numbers-overwhelm-parliament
Zimbabwe’s
new legislators may have to vote on their feet when Parliament
officially opens for its eighth session in two weeks’ time
after it emerged that the building cannot accommodate the incoming
bloated legislature.
The new Constitution
increased the number of legislators from 210 members to 270. The
unity government also agreed to create an extra 60 seats for women.
There was chaos when
the incoming legislators took their oaths of office on Tuesday.
The Parliament building was overcrowded, with some new MPs having
to stand in the corridors for the duration of the swearing-in ceremony.
“Besides the 210
seats elected, we created 60 seats for women Members of Parliament
elected by proportional representation,” said Douglas Mwonzora.
He was one of
the three co-chairpersons of the parliamentary constitution select
committee, which was charged
with crafting the Constitution.
Mwonzora said
there was a seating crisis. “I think they may have to stand.
There is no way the present Parliament building can accommodate
them all,” Mwonzora said.
Nightmare
for parliamentary administration
The panightmare for the
parliamentary administrationrties also agreed to increase numbers
in the Senate from 60 seats to 80, creating a nightmare for the
parliamentary administration headed by the clerk of Parliament,
Austin Zvoma.
It was clear that he
was in a quandary on Tuesday as he restricted the number of visitors
to the House during the swearing-in ceremony.
Zvoma, who has been at
the helm of Parliament for more than a decade, was also forced to
stagger the swearing in of MPs and restricted them to be accompanied
only by one spouse and not more than three children.
Incoming MPs had to take
their oaths in batches of 10 but, despite these measures, the house
was overflowing.
Zvoma said a “plan”
would have to be made soon to create more space although, at the
moment, it was “mission impossible”.
“We have to do
something to create order when Parliament starts sitting,”
said Zvoma.
Pressure
to "perform miracles"
A parliamentary official
said on Wednesday they were under pressure to “perform a miraculous
juggling act” to accommodate all the legislators, particularly
on next Tuesday when Mugabe officially opens the eighth session
of Parliament.
He will open Parliament
on September 17 at a function to be attended by diplomats, journalists
and other invited dignitaries who will pack the small public and
press gallery, further creating problems for Zvoma.
The geographical position
of Parliament - in the city centre - also makes the possibility
of extending the building difficult.
Ricky Mukoza, a political
analyst watching the developments on Tuesday, said the only feasible
option was for the government to build a new building.
“This could also
give government an opportunity to move the legislature to another
city so that government is not centralised in one area,” he
said.
But, Mukoza said, it
was baffling why a country as small as Zimbabwe needed so many parliamentarians,
particularly given the country’s financial constraints.
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