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Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 119
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition (SA Regional Office)
October 17,
2013
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“The
Government is not supreme at all, the Constitution is” - towards
full implementation of the new Constitution
The Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition has asked me to say a few points on what is evidently
a pertinent subject of the need to align our laws to the new constitution.
At the outset it is important to reaffirm that aligning our laws
to be in compliance with the new constitution is a legal and constitutional
obligation if the national values as codified in the new constitution
are to be realized and for our constitution to be a living document
rather than one for the archives. Aligning the laws to the new constitution
is also necessary to give legitimacy to those who govern as their
election and assumption of office was in terms of the constitution
and they swore to adhere to and uphold the constitution in the exercise
of their public mandate.
Zimbabwe is
a constitutional democracy. This means that there is constitutional
supremacy. That the constitution of Zimbabwe is the supreme law,
there is no question. You just need to refer to chapter 1 section
2 of the constitution of Zimbabwe, which unequivocally states that
(1) This Constitution
is the supreme law of Zimbabwe and any law, practice, custom or
conduct inconsistent with it is invalid to the extent of the inconsistency.
(2) The obligations
imposed by this Constitution are binding on every person, natural
or juristic, including the State and all executive, legislative
and judicial institutions and agencies of government at every level,
and must be fulfilled by them.
The way in which
this constitutional clause on constitutional supremacy is worded
in sub-section 1 is critical and interesting. It categorically states
that laws, practices, customs and conduct that is not consistent
with the constitution is “invalid to the extent of the inconsistency”
(own emphasis). This seems to place the obligation on authorities
to make laws consistent with the constitution before they can validly
apply such laws in the governance function. Put simply, the constitution
does not compel citizens or people in Zimbabwe to comply with unconstitutional
laws as they are invalid, rather than potentially invalid. In other
words it is wrong or cannot be reasonable to expect law abiding
people to comply with unconstitutional and therefore invalid laws.
Putting this
in practice is going to place people in Zimbabwe into potential
conflict with the authorities who would expect that people comply
with any law on the statute books unless such law has been repealed,
amended or declared unconstitutional by a court of law. This then
takes us to sub-section 2 of Chapter 1 section 2 of the constitution.
It places obligations that are binding “on every person, natural
or juristic, including the State and all executive, legislative
and judicial institutions and agencies of government at every level”
(own emphasis). This clause is an important clause as it places
an obligation on all branches of government to implement the constitution
to make Zimbabwe realize its national values as per the new constitution.
Given the purport of this clause, the previous approach of the Supreme
Court of Zimbabwe sitting as a constitutional court in the ANZ case
of adopting the dirty hands doctrine in constitutional challenges
now looks untenable.
In the dirty
hands doctrine case, the Supreme Court took the position that a
person (juristic or human) who is challenging the constitutionality
of a law, must first comply with that law before approaching the
court for protection of constitutional rights. In essence given
the new section, other than imposing a duty on the constitutional
court to conduct itself in a way that is constitutional and legal
(valid), it also specifically declares unconstitutional law invalid,
raising the real logic that the dirty hands doctrine which presumes
the law legal unless declared illegal is in itself potentially inconsistent
with the new values that this constitution tries to espouse.
Human rights
and constitutional litigation lawyers have been given an opportunity
to test the resolve of the new constitutional court to play its
role of contributing to the transformation of society to live by
the new values. There are a number of laws and practices that immediately
come to mind as creating fodder for potential floodgates in constitutional
litigation. These include but are not limited to all laws that violate
fundamental rights such as liberty, association, movement and expression.
The new constitution reaffirms such rights as fundamental in the
expanded bill of rights. Other areas of potential constitutional
litigation include the justice ability of economic, social and cultural
rights including the right to life, employment, education, health
and safe environment.
Practices such
as prolonged detention of suspects including through the use of
section 121 of the Criminal Code will also be areas for potential
constitutional litigation. The Criminal
Law Codification Act, the Public
Order and Security Act, the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Broadcasting
Services Act, the Money laundering laws, the laws that allow
for invasion of privacy including recording and documentation of
private conversations in e-mails, phone calls including mobile calls,
internet browsing may also be fertile for legal challenges and reform.
Our investment laws may need reform and challenge to the extent
that our desperation for foreign direct investment (FDI) has opened
up the country to primitive extractive practices that have degraded
our environment and exposed our citizens and indigenous communities
to violations of their socio-economic rights.
The requirement
for all state institutions and branches of government to conform
to the constitution and to implement it also means that the laws
that create constitutional bodies and their administrative and procedural
framework also needs to be reformed in order to give greater independence,
impartiality, accountability and professionalism to such bodies.
Parliament
has a responsibility to ensure that this happens. Some of the critical
constitutional and legal bodies that need this alignment of laws
and practices to meet their constitutional obligations and man-date
include but are not limited to the Courts, the Human Rights Commission,
the Electoral Commission, the anti-corruption commission, the land
commission and the environmental management agency.
The judiciary
is going to be a key branch of government in checks and balances
to ensure that it contributes to society transformation. As former
RSA Constitutional Court Justice Zak Yacoob said “if the judiciary
is to transform, the values of the Constitution should be of the
most importance when judges apply their minds and when they are
appointed…Judges in those (Apartheid) days judged in favour
of authority…The rich and poor were certainly not treated
equally in our courts...and not judged equally. There was a great
deal of arrogance and rudeness…everybody must be treated equally.
The values of the Constitution are supreme.... The government is
not supreme at all, the Constitution is” (own emphasis).
In ending I
need to reaffirm that the laws of Zimbabwe need to be audited to
make them consistent with the new constitution. A serious audit
needs to be done professionally and deliberately followed by a systematic
advocacy programme by civil society. The wording of the constitutional
supremacy clauses of our constitution has placed a huge onus on
the government to embark on a sustained programme to re-align the
laws to conform to the constitution. Sadly this is not happening
at the speed that it needs to be done to give meaning to our new
national values. Happily though, the constitution is worded in a
way that will make it difficult for the government to implement
unconstitutional and therefore “invalid” laws. Let us
hope that our courts will stand up to the government and enforce
separation of powers if and when, as it often happens, the government
tries to implement invalid laws rather than embark on law reform
to give meaning to our new constitution.
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