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General Laws Amendment Act, 2005 (Act 6/2005)
February 03, 2006

Read General Laws Amendment Bill, 2005

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Published and into force Friday 3rd February, 2006


General Laws Amendment Act - Highlights
Excerpt from Bill Watch 4/2006
Veritas
February 11, 2006

Most of the Act's thirty-four sections deal with relatively unimportant tidying-up amendments to various statutes. Significant provisions that are likely to be of more general interest include the following:—

  • tenfold increases in the monetary values of the 14 levels in the Standard Scale of Fines, the new values ranging from $50 000 for level 1 to $25 million for level 14 (section 11). One effect of the new scale is that the police will now be permitted to invite admission of guilt fines of up to $250 000 in appropriate cases (the previous maximum was $25 000). This is the first adjustment to the Standard Scale of Fines since September 2003.
  • increases in fines for money-laundering, by stating them as levels and thereby relating them to the Standard Scale of Fines (section 9)
  • changes in the Defence Act's provisions for court martial appeals, which will once again be heard by judges of the Supreme Court, not the High Court (section 16)
  • increases in fines for offences under Public Order and Security Act, by stating them as levels and thereby relating them to the Standard Scale of Fines (section 18) [contrary to suggestions in some Press reports, there are no new prison terms for the offences of insulting the President or communicating falsehoods; all prison terms remain unchanged]
  • formal repeal of provisions of Postal and Telecommunications Act declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in The Law Society of Zimbabwe vs the Minister of Transport and Communications and the Attorney General, 2002 (section 19)
  • validation of rural electrification levies improperly collected by ZESA since 2002 (section 21)
  • relaxation of the previous strict controls on the use of farm equipment compulsorily acquired by the State under the Acquisition of Farm Equipment and Material Act (section 26)

Note: Recent Press reports have described the “looting” of farm equipment from farms in the Lowveld.

The only law providing for compulsory acquisition of farm equipment is the Acquisition of Farm Equipment and Material Act, 2004 (No. 7 of 2004). The acquiring authority must be a Minister on behalf of the State.

Section 10 of that Act is headed "Use of acquired farm equipment or material".

When the incidents described in the Press reports occurred, section 10 was in the following form:—

"10 Use of acquired farm equipment or material

Any farm equipment or material acquired in terms of this Act shall vest in the State for the benefit of the Land Reform Programme and shall not be sold or otherwise disposed of to any private individual, institution or corporation."

With effect from the 3rd February, 2006, however, section 10 was repealed and the following new wording substituted (by section 26 of the General Laws Amendment Act, 2005 (No. 6 of 2005):—

"10 Use of acquired farm equipment or material

(1) Subject to subsection (2), any farm equipment or material acquired in terms of this Act shall vest in the State for the benefit of the Land Reform Programme.

(2) The State may, subject to such conditions as are prescribed under section twelve, sell or otherwise dispose of for valuable consideration any farm equipment or material acquired in terms of this Act to any private individual, institution or corporation requiring to use the equipment or material for agricultural purposes on any agricultural land:

Provided that if the person from whom the farm equipment or material was acquired by the State contests the acquisition, the State shall not sell or otherwise dispose of it in terms of this subsection until the matter is finally determined in accordance with section eight."

It is significant that the wording of the new section 10(2) authorises disposal for valuable consideration thus excluding gratuitous donation to a third party.


ACT

To amend section 9 of the Statute Law Compilation and Revision Act [Chapter 1:03], the Maintenance Act [Chapter 5:09], section 4 of the Judges Salaries, Allowances and Pensions Act [Chapter 7:08], sections 13 and 14 of the Judicial College Act [Chapter 7:17], the Service of Documents (Telegraph) Act [Chapter 8:13], section 346A of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [Chapter 9:07], sections 6 and 7 of the Miscellaneous Offences Act [Chapter 9:15], section 63 of the Serious Offences (Confiscation of Profits) Act [Chapter 9:17], section 9 of the Stock Theft Act [Chapter 9:18], the First Schedule to the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] (No. 23 of 2004), section 18 of the Betting and Totalizator Control Act [Chapter 10:02], section 5 of the Pools Control Act [Chapter 10:19], section 6 of the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act [Chapter 10:20], section 5 of the Lotteries and Gaming Act [Chapter 10:26] (No. 26 of 1998), the Defence Act [Chapter 11:02], sections 2 and 30 of the War Victims Compensation Act [Chapter 11:16], the Public Order and Security Act [Chapter 11:17] (No. 1 of 2002), sections 98 and 103 of the Postal and Telecommunications Act [Chapter 12:05] (No. 4 of 2000), the Electricity Act [Chapter 13:19] (No. 4 of 2002), section 1 of the Rural Electrification Fund Act [Chapter 13:20] (No. 3 of 2002), section 4 of the Copper Control Act [Chapter 14:06], section 3 of the Moneylending and Rates of Interest Act [Chapter 14:14], section 4 of the Second-hand Goods Act [Chapter 14:16], section 19 of the Health Service Act [Chapter 15:16] (No. 28 of 2004), the Acquisition of Farm Equipment and Material Act [Chapter 18:23] (No. 7 of 2004), sections 6, 13 and 119 of the Water Act [Chapter 20:24] (No. 31 of 1998), the Environmental Management Act [Chapter 20:27] (No. 11 of 2002), section 6 of the Exchange Control Act [Chapter 22:05], the Banking Act [Chapter 24:20], the Boxing and Wrestling Control Act [Chapter 25:02], the Legal Practitioners Act [Chapter 27:07], and sections 193 and 196 of the Urban Councils Act [Chapter 29:15]; and to update cross-references to the Children's Act [Chapter 5:06] in certain acts.

ENACTED by the President and the Parliament of Zimbabwe.

1 Short title
This Act may be cited as the General Laws Amendment Act, 2005.

2 Amendment of section 9 of Cap. 1:031
Section 9 ("Appointment of Law Reviser") of the Statute Law Compilation and Revision Act [Chapter 1:03] is amended by the insertion after subsection (3) of the following subsection-

"(4) Notwithstanding the above provisions, the Minister may appoint the Deputy Chairman of the Law Development Commission appointed in terms of section 4(b) of the Law Development Commission Act [Chapter 1:02] to act as Law Reviser.".


Download the full document


1. Votes and Proceedings, 28th July, 2005, page 177

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