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Zim
NGO Bill: dangerous for human rights defenders
Betrays High Degree of Gvt Paranoia
and Contempt For the Regional and International Community
Arnold Tsunga and Tafadzwa Mugabe, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights
(ZLHR)
July 28, 2004
Observations
on the Draft NGO Bill
In terms section 2 of the draft bill, NGO " means
any foreign or local body or association of persons, corporate or unincorporated,
or any institution, the objects of which include or are one or more of
the following:
a) The provision
of all any of the material, mental, physical or social needs or persons
or families
b) the rendering of charity to persons in distress
c) the prevention of social distress or destitution or persons or families
d) the provision of assistance in, or promotion of activities aimed
at uplifting the standard of living of persons or families
e) the provision of funds for legal aid
f) the prevention of cruelty to or the promotion of the welfare of animals
g) the promotion of and protection of human rights and good
governance
h) the promotion and protection of environmental rights and interest
and sustainable development
i) such other objects as may be prescribed
j) the collection of contributions for nay of the foregoing"
It is quite self evident
that from the above definition that every NGO and human rights defenders
"hrds" are covered directly by the NGO legislation. Since
human rights are universal, interrelated and interdependent it is quite
clear that by using the phrase "promoting of and protection
of human rights" the government has targeted and included organisations
that promote and protect civil and political as well as economic, social
and cultural rights in the net of organisations that it wants to control.
Section 9 of the proposed
NGO Legislation provides that
"1) No
non-governmental organisations shall
a) Commence or continue to carry
on its activities or
b) seek financial assistance from
any source (own emphasis)
Unless it has been registered in respect of the particular object or
objects in furtherance of which it is constitutional
2) No person shall
collect contributions from the public except in terms of this Act
3) No person shall in any manner take part in management or control
of a non governmental organisation, knowing that the organisation is
contravening subsection (1)."
This section makes
it compulsory for all NGOs to register if they are to carry out any activities
should the bill be promulgated into law. The section also creates a minefield
for possible management boards of NGOs as it creates personal criminal
sanctions against the board members in their individual capacities should
they sit on the board of an unregistered NGO.
The proposed bill
also creates a NGO Council composed of 5 civil society representatives
and 9 government representatives, all appointed by and at the discretion
of the Executive. The functions of the council shall inter alia be:
a) " . . .
to consider and determine every application for registration and every
proposed cancellation or amendment of a certificate of registration
and
b) to conduct investigations into the administration and activities
of non governmental organisations . . . and to take such disciplinary
or other action as may be appropriate . . .
c) to formulate rules for the registration or deregistration of non
governmental organisations
d) to formulate code of conduct for non-governmental organisations".
Part of the details
which Directors of NGOs will be compelled to state in the applications
for their organisations to be registered by the NGO Council include, in
terms of section 10 of the bill "the names of, nationality and addresses
of its promoters; its sources of funding; its plan of action or projected
activities for the next three years; the procedure for convening meetings;
the terms and conditions of office bearers and removal of such office
bearers from office; disclosure provisions for all foreign donations to
the organisation;" These requirements are needlessly intrusive and
show an appetite on the part of government to use the law to as a tool
of intelligence against the NGOs and their boards and management. The
provisions are sinister.
On the issue of funding,
section 17 of the bill provides that "No local NGO shall receive
any foreign funding or donation to carry out activities involving or including
issues of governance". Issues of governance are defied in section
2 as "includes the promotion and protection of human rights
and political governance issues". In other words, if the impact
of the provision is to be understood correctly, then section 17 must be
read as follows: -No local NGO shall receive any foreign funding
or donation to carry out activities involving or including the promotion
and protection of human rights and political governance- Given
that the universally accepted perception of human rights is broad enough
to cover civil and political as well as economic social and cultural rights,
it is clear that the government could ban any foreign funding of any and
every disliked NGO using this provision if the bill is promulgated into
law. In the event that an NGO gets funding and it is deemed that the funding
is unlawful by the government, the bill provides in section 28 that the
Minister may order repatriation of the money back to the funding partner
or may take possession of the money, securities or property and ultimately
it may be paid over to the Guardian's Fund. At dissolution, the
property of NGOs may be taken over by the State in terms of section 30
of the bill. The government has therefore not only angled itself for a
serious intrusion into the affairs of NGOs in order to paralyse them and
hrds, but also positioned itself to illicitly benefit by expropriation
of assets of disliked NGOs in the real and likely event of forcible closures
under the pretext that the NGOs have committed "administrative illegalities".
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