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  • New Constitution-making process - Index of articles


  • Election Watch Issue 2-2012
    The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
    January 27, 2012

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    War veterans disrupt constitutional reform

    News of fresh problems in Zimbabwe's controversial constitution-making process attracted most attention in all the media during the first two weeks of the New Year.

    But this was quickly overshadowed by revelations into the circumstances surrounding the death of the country's first black army commander, Retired General Solomon Mujuru, which seized the media's headlines when the inquest into the general's death opened in the middle of the month.

    The media reported the Constitutional Parliamentary Select Committee (Copac) as having run into trouble after the first four chapters of the draft constitution were leaked to the state media. The ZANU PF-controlled daily, The Herald, was the first to expose this confidential data. It serialized what it claimed were the first four provisional chapters of the new supreme law between December 29th and January 5th this year.

    The contents of these chapters reportedly infuriated the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association (ZNLWVA), who not only threatened to sue Copac for allegedly ignoring the views of "most" Zimbabweans, but also disrupted its Press briefing in Harare on January 13th (The Herald, The Manica Post, Daily News and NewsDay, 3, 13, 14 & 17/1 and ZBC, 1, 2, 3, 7, 11, 12, 13 and 21/1, 1pm & 8pm). They accused Copac and the drafters of the constitution of promoting gay rights, dual citizenship, property rights, devolution of power and opposing land reform.

    The government media did not test the veracity of ZNLWVA's allegations with a response from Copac, nor consider whether its decision to publish such provisional work would prejudice the process of drafting the new law.

    On the other hand, the private media viewed ZNLWVA's behaviour as part of ZANU PF's efforts to influence the outcome of the draft constitution or derail the whole process. They also viewed this as having the potential to further undermine the credibility of the constitution-making process and chances of its conclusion within new timeframes (The Financial Gazette, Zimbabwe Independent, The Standard, NewsDay and New Zimbabwe.com, 6, 10, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20 & 23/1).

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