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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Fact sheet: What will happen after the Referendum
Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum
March
27, 2013
The Constitution
Referendum results
were gazetted on 26 March 2013 in General
Notice 201A/2013 signed by the Minister of Constitutional and
Parliamentary Affairs. This fact sheet explains what will now happen
from the date of such gazetting until the elections.
- Under the
current constitution,
parliament runs for 5 years therefore the current Parliament
runs from from 29 June 2008, a day after the day President Mugabe
was sworn in, until June 29, 2013.
- Current Parliament
must be dissolved before 29 June 2013, failing which it shall
automatically stand dissolved on 29 June 2013.
- An election
must then be held no later than 90 days from the date of dissolution
of Parliament, that is, by 27 September 2013.
- 30 days starting
from 27 March 2013 must lapse before parliament debates the constitution
and must pass it by a two thirds majority. If parliament passes
it, which is most likely, given the cross party consensus, the
President will sign it into law.
- Most of its
provisions will come into effect immediately after Presidential
assent with a few of the provisions coming into effect once a
new President is sworn in.
- A minimum
of 30 days after the new Constitution comes in the Zimbabwe Election
Commission (ZEC) shall carry out voter registration to enable
those who are not registered to do so.
- The President
proclaims an election after the ZEC voter registration exercise
- Fourteen
days must lapse between the President’s proclamation to
the nomination court.
- 58 days must
pass between the proclamation and the election.
- Adding up
the maths, 30 + 30 + 58 = 118 ( a little less than 4 months)
- Although
the elections are constitutionally due anytime between 29 June
and 27 September, logistically, and given other requirements under
the Electoral Act, in particular the mandatory ZEC voter registration,
the earliest date the election could be held will be about 25
July. However, parliament may be able to waive some of the time
scales.
- If other
factors are taken into account, for example the need to alight
to Electoral
Act with the new constitution, Zimbabwe might need up to 5
months from 26 March to hold an election, 26 March being the date
the Constitution has been gazetted.
Visit the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum fact
sheet
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