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Challenging
ministers' constitutional, moral authority
Alex Magaisa
April 12, 2008
View this story
on The Standard website
THE lengths to which
the Zanu PF regime is going to establish whatever remains of the
legitimacy of its authority over Zimbabwe are truly shocking and
in many ways embarrassing.
In a piece entitled
Cabinet Still Functional in The Herald of 10 April 2008, Justice
Bharat Patel, the Acting Attorney-General (AAG), is reported to
have given a legal opinion that the "dissolution" of the
Cabinet on 27 March 2008, was no more than "administrative
practice" with no effect on the tenure of its members.
This article questions
both the legal and moral legitimacy of the continued authority of
ministers appointed by President Robert Mugabe. I have to acknowledge
that The Herald may have been selective in its representation of
the AAG's opinion so that it probably omitted some of the more unfavourable
and cautious advice that the honourable man may have given.
The AAG is quoted as
having opined that "the reconstitution of Cabinet after its
'dissolution' is not attended by any constitutional formality and
likewise the Cabinet's reconstitution may be effected by dint of
administrative practice" (sic).
One can understand that
Zanu PF is frantically trying to get out of the hole it dug for
itself by re-asserting its authority using the State institutions.
But with respect,
it is not correct to suggest that there is no formality attendant
upon the "reconstitution" of the Cabinet. The Cabinet
is a Constitutional body established in terms of Section 31G of
the Constitution
and its "reconstitution" cannot simply be reduced to the
status of a mere administrative matter.
It is clearly stated
that a member of the Cabinet holds office at the President's pleasure
and that in terms of S. 31G (3) before taking office he has to take
and subscribe an oath before the President or some other person
in a form set out under Schedule 1. When he dissolved the cabinet
he was exercising his (dis)pleasure, to disappoint those who were
in his cabinet.
If he must re-appoint
them they, surely, should go through the rigmarole of subscribing
and taking the oath as required by the Constitution. But, of course,
we know the embarrassment that this formal process carries under
the present circumstances, hence the attempt to "reconstitute"
the Cabinet "administratively" so that they can continue
as if nothing has happened.
Granted the
Constitution has loopholes. The AAG argues that Section 31E (2)
of the Constitution states that a person may hold Ministerial office
without being an MP for a period of up to three months. In fact,
this does not give the full picture.
There is a proviso to
that section, which states that a person may continue to hold ministerial
office during the period of dissolution of Parliament until such
time that Parliament first meets after that dissolution. On this
generous interpretation, this suggests that the period during which
a non-MP can hold Ministerial office can even be extended beyond
three months if there is no Parliament due to dissolution until
such time that the new Parliament first meets.
In fact, the gap is so
appallingly wide that if he wanted to, President Mugabe could appoint
a new set of Ministers at this stage using Section 31D. But this
too would be embarrassing. That's why they would rather argue that
the "dissolution" was of no effect to pretend that the
old ministers are continuing in office. Why then, it must be asked,
did he dissolve Cabinet if he intended that it would continue functioning
after the election?
If what is being suggested
were to hold, Zimbabwe may be subject to government by a whole team
of unelected individuals for quite a long period. The trouble is
that the commencement of the tenure of the new Parliament is heavily
dependent on the result of the Presidential election. This is because
Section 63(4) of the Constitution provides that the period of tenure
of parliament is deemed to commence on the day the person elected
as President enters office. Therefore, until such time that the
result of the Presidential election is known and that person enters
office there is effectively no Parliament.
I do not think Parliament
intended provision for non-MPs to be appointed to the Cabinet to
be used in this way except perhaps in exceptional circumstances.
This may be where Parliament is dissolved during the period of a
war, not where such continued dissolution is by reason of deliberate
refusal to complete the electoral process. What is being proposed
is a clear abuse of the Constitution.
For surely, we have here
a bizarre situation in which men and women who lost (dismally) the
people's mandate in the recent Parliamentary elections continue
to be in charge of the country's affairs. The AAG wants to downgrade
the "dissolution" of Cabinet to a purely administrative
practice by distinguishing it from removal under Section 31 E
(1).
Why then, it has to be
asked, should the President take the burden of ordering the "dissolution"
of the Cabinet when it is not required or intended to have any legal
effect? What is the purpose and effect of what is now described
as an "administrative practice"? What administrative goal
is intended to be achieved by doing something that is apparently
not required by the Constitution? Is this not, really, the practice
by which Ministerial tenure has traditionally been ended but because
it does not now suit the circumstances in which Zanu PF finds itself
it is conveniently relegated to an "administrative practice"?
The AAG's assertions
appear to be inconsistent with certain key events showing the way
these Ministers have traditionally understood to be the effect of
"dissolution". Let us take the case of Aeneas Chigwedere,
the erstwhile Minister of Education.
Why, it must be asked,
did the Chigwedere accept appointment as Headman Mubaiwa, itself
considered a public office, if indeed he was still holding public
office as a Minister? Never mind the legality or moral basis of
his appointment, this was surely a man who should have known that
he could not hold another public office during his Ministerial tenure
as Section 31D clearly states that no Minister or Deputy Minister
"shall directly or indirectly hold any other public office
or any paid office in the employment of any person".
How does the AAG reconcile
the conduct of Chigwedere, if indeed he is still a Minister, with
the argument that his Ministerial tenure still subsists? I suspect
it will be stated that Chigwedere resigned his Ministerial office
prior to becoming a Headman, even though it defies common sense
to leave the lavish lifestyle of a Minister to take up the lesser
status of Headmanship, unless of course one argues that the call
of the ancestors, which Chigwedere alleged, was too powerful to
resist. It is hard to overlook the unique political circumstances
that Zanu PF finds itself and simply accept at face value the opinion
of the AAG as reported by The Herald.
This is a party that
is in serious trouble. They did things that they should not have
been done and are now looking for Constitutional loopholes to legitimise
authority.
One is left to wonder
whether this is a case, perhaps of the emperor discovering that
he really has no clothes and is, therefore, running around to gather
leaves to cover his modesty.
And at the end
of it all, you have to wonder, what other Constitutional loopholes
and hideouts have they asked the AG's Office to look for?
Alex Magaisa
is based at The University of Kent Law School and can be contacted
at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
or a.t.magaisa@kent.ac.uk
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
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