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Will the Constitution be ready before elections? - Constitution
Watch
Veritas
April 02, 2012
COPAC:
Latest Predictions for the Path Ahead
Speaking earlier
this week about the recall of the lead drafters [see Constitution
Watch of 30th March 2012], COPAC co-chair Douglas Mwonzora,
ever optimistic, ventured that COPAC should now be able to achieve:
- completion
of the draft, including fine-tuning after the current 10-day exercise,
by the end of April
- Second All-Stakeholders’
Conference in May
- the Referendum
in September, possibly earlier if everything goes smoothly.
That obviously
assumed a trouble-free few weeks ahead, with speedy agreement between
the parties on the outstanding issues and no hitches over getting
the final draft approved by the principals, then translated into
all vernacular languages and Braille, as previously promised, and,
very importantly, printed in large numbers for distribution to participants
in the Second All-Stakeholders’ Conference in time to permit
them to study it and consult their constituencies before the Conference
itself – a tall order indeed.
The co-chairs
have also mentioned the possibility of a mini-outreach before the
Second All-Stakeholders’ Conference, to explain the draft
and help people familiarise themselves with it. Something of the
sort would be desirable – if the reaction to the leaked drafts
is anything to go by, people have been far too ready to misconstrue
provisions or not read them in context.
President
Mugabe’s Different Time Frame: Referendum in May!
On Wednesday
28th March COPAC’s ZANU-PF Co-chairperson Munyaradzi Paul
Mangwana reported to the party’s Politburo on COPAC’s
progress on the draft. Afterwards party spokesman Rugare Gumbo said
the party’s negotiators Patrick Chinamasa and Nicholas Goche
had been given until Friday to clear the parked issues. Failing
that, the principals would take over. The Politburo would meet again
in extraordinary session on Wednesday 4th April to “decide
once and for all on the constitution”. On Friday, at a meeting
of ZANU-PF Central Committee, President Mugabe, in remarks broadcast
later on television and radio, reiterated his insistence that the
elections must be held this year, with or without a new constitution,
and said that the Referendum must be in May. If COPAC could not
finish the job in time, he insisted, the principals would do it
for them and if the Referendum returned a No vote, there would be
elections under the Lancaster House Constitution, meaning the present
Constitution
without the amendments made to it by Constitution
Amendment No. 19 that underpin the existence of the Inclusive
Government.
Problems
Raised by the President’s Declaration
The President’s
timetable sets targets impossible to reconcile with Article 6 of
the GPA
– and surely impossible to achieve at all. It has not taken
into account the following problems:
For
a Referendum in May
- even if
the principals decide to intervene and try to finish the job themselves,
it is difficult to see them doing so in time for a May Referendum
- the timetable
does not allow for the holding of the Second All-Stakeholders’
Conference required by Article 6
- nor does
it envisage the ensuing debate in Parliament,
which in any event is in recess until mid-May
- it overlooks
the need to gazette the final draft before a referendum
- there will
not be enough time for the country to examine the draft after
its translation into vernacular languages, and Braille, meaning
that voters will not have long enough to be properly informed
of the merits and demerits of the draft placed before them for
adoption or rejection
- no heed
is paid to the need to amend or replace the current, out-of-date
Referendums Act – or the difficulties of doing that when
the necessary Bill has not yet been approved by Cabinet
- the voters
roll is still not acceptable to civil society, MDC-T and MDC –
despite the Registrar-General’s recent claims that it is
perfect.
For
a General Election
- an election
before proper implementation of the GPA would go against repeated
SADC Summit resolutions and before the Zimbabwe political playing
field has been levelled by making the reforms necessary to avoid
a repetition of the 2008 election
violence.
- both MDCs
have said they would not take part without a fairer environment,
and an election without them would be a sham in the eyes of the
region and the world.
- there is
a “Catch 22” situation: if the President breaks the
GPA, ends the Inclusive Government and calls elections, he may
forfeit recognition as President by SADC. If he does not break
the GPA and it continues in existence, Schedule 8 to the Constitution
will remain in force, meaning that the President cannot legally
call for elections without the consent of the Prime Minister.
- lack of
funds for an election. The Treasury has not budgeted for an election
this year, only for the Referendum. If the funds come from elsewhere
than the fiscus [e.g. from diamond revenues] this would add fuel
to the criticism that elections are always skewed in favour of
the incumbent by the use of State resources for re-election, which
would affect the credibility of the election.
Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission [ZEC]
- ZEC would
have to run the Referendum, but the Electoral
Act has still not been amended to flesh out its terms of reference
to enable it do so properly.
- If the GPA
is abandoned and ZEC is called on to run a general election under
the Lancaster House Constitution [amended 19 times] and an unamended
Electoral Act, it may find it difficult to organise a credible
election.
Note: ZEC’s
existence as an independent constitutional commission does not depend
on the continued existence of the GPA. Although the present constitutional
provisions for ZEC were added by Constitution Amendment No. 19,
just ahead of the formation of the Inclusive Government, those provisions
will remain in force if the GPA comes to a premature end before
the adoption of a new constitution. Only Schedule 8 to the Constitution,
which provides for the structure of the Inclusive Government, will
fall away if the GPA comes to an end.
Final
Comment
The President
has been declaring that he wants immediate elections from well before
the end of last year. This most recent declaration, although forcefully
made, may still be impossible to implement, but it is likely to
serve the useful purpose of getting COPAC to avoid any more unnecessary
delays – although it is to be hoped that, after the debacle
of the First Stakeholders’ Conference, the upcoming Second
All Stakeholders’ Conference, a vital part of the constitution-making
process, will have adequate preparation and not be unduly rushed.
Also, people must have a chance to study the final gazetted version
thoroughly before the Referendum. It would be sad if, after all
the seemingly preventable delays that have dragged the process on
for three years, rather than the one year it should have taken,
the important last stages were to be skimped.
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