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Outlined
legislative agenda should be fulfilled
Southern African Parliamentary Support Trust
September 12, 2011
Another ambitious
legislative agenda was outlined by President Robert Mugabe when
he officially opened the 4th Session of the 7th Parliament
this week on Tuesday. The pomp and fan fare surrounding every official
opening of a session of Parliament (marred however by an outbreak
of violence
outside Parliament building) is meaningless unless the legislative
agenda is adhered to and Parliament is seen busy making laws for
the peace, order and good governance of the country as per the dictates
of the Constitution.
When the President
officially opened the 3rd Session of the 7th Parliament on 13th
July 2010, he outlined what promised to be a busy legislative agenda
for that session. A total of 24 bills were supposed to be brought
before Parliament during the course of the Session. However, only
seven of the total number of bills were introduced in Parliament;
namely: Zimbabwe
Human Rights Commission Bill, Electoral
Amendment Bill, Deposit
Protection Bill, National
Incomes and Pricing Bill, Micro Small and Medium Enterprises
Bill, Attorney
General’s Office Bill and Energy
Regulatory Bill. In addition to these seven bills, Parliament
managed to pass the Zimbabwe
National Security Amendment Bill and the General
Laws Amendment Bill. The Public
Order and Security Amendment Bill, a private member bill initiated
by Hon. Innocent Gonese (MDC-T), was passed by the House of Assembly
and is currently stuck in the Senate.
While the House
of Assembly did an excellent job to push for significant changes
to the General Laws Amendment Bill and pass amendments to the Public
Order and Security Act, some very important pieces of legislation
that were supposed to be introduced in Parliament such as Mines
and Minerals Amendment Bill, Exploration Corporation Bill, Environmental
Management Bill, Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Amendment
Bill, Media Practitioners Bill and Trafficking in Persons Bill were
nowhere to be seen during the course of the session. While Parliament
cannot be blamed for the poor legislative agenda (as many of the
bills emanate from ministers), the failure to transact major legislative
business still has a major negative impact on the image of the law-making
arm of the State.
This time around, the
President mentioned 19 bills which he said would be brought before
Parliament during the Fourth Session. They are as follows: Electoral
Amendment Bill; Referendums Amendment Bill; Zimbabwe Income Tax
Amendment Bill; Exploration Corporation Bill; Zimbabwe Border Post
Authority Bill; Civil Aviation (Amendment) Bill; Micro Finance Bill;
Women’s Council Bill; Securities Amendment Bill; RBZ Debt
Restructuring Bill; NRZ Amendment Bill; Land Developers Bill; State
Enterprises Restructuring Agency Bill; Older Persons Bill; GMO Biotechnology
Bill; Public Health Amendment Bill; Diamond Bill; Zimbabwe Investment
Authority Bill; and Food Control Bill.
An additional six treatises,
conventions and protocols are also expected to be tabled before
Parliament, namely: Convention on the Rights of Persons with disabilities;
Domestication of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking
in Persons; Kavango-Zambezi Tran frontier Conservation Area Treaty;
the Great Mapungubwe Tran frontier Conservation Area Treaty; the
Greater Limpopo Tran frontier Conservation Area Treaty; and the
SADC Protocol on Shared Watercourses.
What is not
clear from the President’s address is whether or not some
of the important bills that were supposed to be introduced in Parliament
in the last session have been abandoned. They include Media Practitioners
Bill, Mines and Minerals Amendment Bill and the Criminal Law (Codification
and Reform) Amendment Bill. There is no mention of these bills in
the President’s speech. Related to Media Practitioners Bill
are loud calls to review the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Broadcasting
Services Act. The President’s speech was silent on these
two pieces of legislation. I am not sure therefore how the much
talked about media reform can succeed without amending the pernicious
provisions of these bills.
Although not
mentioned in the President’s address, one other major piece
of legislation expected to come before Parliament is the Constitutional
Bill that seeks to bring into effect the new Constitution. The nature
of this Bill is the first step towards determining whether or not
Zimbabwe is prepared for a free, fair and credible election. While
amendments to the Electoral
Act are important to prepare for credible polls, these will
not go very far without a democratic people-driven Constitution
that is fully respected by State agents. Other statutes to do with
the security of persons and freedom of movement and assembly also
need to be brought into the equation in order for us to confidently
say we now have a conducive environment for elections. So Parliament
this session has the onerous task of preparing the country for elections
by enacting the appropriate policies and laws and overseeing enforcement
of these laws.
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