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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Deferring democracy: Dining with a delinquent
Tapera
Kapuya
July 18, 2009
Speaking at
the burial of veteran nationalist Akim Ndlovu, Zanu PF leader Robert
Mugabe quipped that the writing of Zimbabwe-s new constitution
will not be a 'mass party-. The aged leader has not
hidden his liking for the Kariba
Draft, negotiated in secrecy by the ruling political parties-
representatives: Welshman Ncube, Tendai Biti and Patrick Chinamasa.
The Draft was agreed on in 2007 - a year before the September
2008 Global
Political Agreement that led to the formation of the unity government.
Reasons for
his preference are easy to read, and should provide enough cause
for the pro-democracy movement to remain vigilant. The Kariba Draft
retains a system of executive fundamentalism that has so undermined
good governance, nurtured corruption and stifled democracy. The
draft carves for the president unchecked and exclusive authority,
placing him above all citizens and the law. He has unfettered powers
to make all key appointments with the only requirement being that
he consults bodies which he would have appointed himself -
a classic treatise on how to consult oneself. These appointments
range from ministers, permanent secretaries, judges, Reserve Bank
Governor, Attorney General, ambassadors to chairpersons of various
commissions set out in the Draft - including the Electoral
Commission.
As if not having
learnt anything from our immediate history, the Draft gives the
president exclusive powers over the military including the power
to declare war. No cabinet or parliamentary approval is required,
until after sometime - by which the country would already
be at war. Using existing provisions in the Lancaster House constitution,
Mugabe sacrificed the lives of many of our soldiers in the DRC.
This adventure in 1997 depleted over a billion dollars in unbudgeted
resources - setting in motion the collapse of the economy.
The president
also has powers to declare a State of Emergency and martial law
without cabinet and parliament approval. We have had an experience
of a State of Emergency and martial law before: 1964 until 1990.
During this time, a number of atrocities were committed under the
banner of preserving state security. Mugabe-s admitted 'moment
of madness- saw an estimated 20 000 people being butchered
in Matebeleland, and several hundreds disappeared across the country.
Civil liberties were suspended - and political freedoms entertained
to the extent to which they were either state sanctioned or aided
the state.
In normal democracies,
parliament is meant to provide checks on the executive in addition
to its duty of 'law making-. A president who violates
the constitution or deliberately fails to defend it can be impeached.
Yet in Zimbabwe, the drafters of Kariba sought a constitution that
removes any parliamentary sanction against him. Instead, the president
is handed a sledge hammer to smash parliament: powers to dissolve
parliament. This power can be exercised as he wishes - without
need to consult or show reason.
Such powers
are as enticing to politicians seeking to retain political power
as they are to those seeking to acquire it. The same can not be
said for the country - the less power politicians have, the
healthier the nation. The Draft is a perfect tool for dictators
and a monumental retard of democracy. This is the draft that in
all likelihood will be presented to the people.
The other parties
to the GPA have been trying to convince Zimbabweans and the world
that this will not be case. But experience militates against their
assurance. For a start, few Zimbabweans would have believed that
the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) would sign such a scandal
as the ill-named Global Political Agreement (GPA). Any reading of
the document proves that Zanu PF had an upper hand. Even after losing
the 2008 elections, Mugabe walked away being both Head of State
and Head of Government. He chairs cabinet. Morgan Tsvangirai, the
winner of the elections has had to live with being reminded by some
ministers and security chiefs that they take order 'only from
the President-.
Issues remain
unresolved. Mugabe refuses to swear in the MDC nominee for deputy
in the agriculture ministry, Roy Bennet; Gideon Gono and Johannes
Tomana remain in office; Mugabe-s appointees remain as permanent
secretaries, giving Mugabe control of the administration of all
ministries and; Mugabe refuses to convene the National Security
Council. In the past months, we have witnessed the use of the courts
to decimate the MDC lead in the House of Assembly. Seven MDC Members
of Parliament have been conveniently convicted or are facing trial
on charges that carry custodial sentences that disqualify them to
from Parliament.
In all these
situations, the MDC has done little apart from releasing statements
and 'referring matters to SADC-. As the party waits
for a response from SADC, Mugabe-s onslaught remains. It is
not difficult to see where power lies in this government: The MDC
looks like guests of a delinquent.
The GPA sets
a number of areas of focus and deliverables. Most of these require
nothing but goodwill to achieve. These include the unlocking of
civil and political liberties; allowing the free movement of humanitarian
aid; freeing the media and stopping political violence. Five months
into the life of this transitional regime, we are yet to see any
signs of these matters being addressed.
Considering
that the MDC is failing to win on these issues, it is difficult
to imagine the party gathering enough strength and conviction to
fight off the possible imposition of the Kariba Draft. Mugabe has
since reminded everyone that they agreed to the Kariba Draft. On
its part, the MDC has developed the narrative of 'incremental
change-. It reads naïve.
Some elements
in the party are of the thinking that the 'constitution making
process- currently going on must not be challenged no matter
how bad it is or how bad the content will be. The idea is that this
unity regime concludes at the delivery of a constitution, with elections
being held and a popular government being elected. This line of
thought feeds on the hope that the MDC would win the election -
and then as a new government, will create space and resources for
a thoroughly people driven democratic constitution.
MDC MP for Nyanga
Douglas Mwonzora, one of the chairpersons of Parliament-s
Select committee has even gone further to suggest that opposing
the process is tantamount to supporting Mugabe. Already many within
the broader democracy movement have heeded to this scaremongering
and are slavishly following the road to the butcher-s house.
Without the
constitution hurdle being passed, there will be no elections we
are told. So in theory we must all support the parliamentary process
chicanery and the Kariba Draft it seeks to legitimize. This builds
on the same defeatist theory that saw the people-s party being
pushed into an unfair and anti-democratic deal with Zanu PF. Then,
people-s hunger and suffering was used to capitulate and compromise
democratic principles instead of being seen as the objective factors
upon which the struggle for democracy would be fought and achieved.
This school
of thought has been opposed by our democracy movement since its
inception. The 2000 Chidyausiku Draft Constitution could have been
accepted if it were for Mwonzora and his kind. The same reasons
they raise now applied then. Even better. At least the Chidyausiku
Commission managed to project a façade of popular consultation
whilst masking Mugabe-s imposing hand. The same can not be
said of the Select Committee cronies. In voting No against Chidyausiku-s
draft in the 2000 Constitutional Referendum, Zimbabweans were making
it clear that undemocratic processes can never give birth to sustainable
democratic outcomes. They won.
Worse, it is
even hard to believe an MP touting the 'elections after constitution-
carrot when members of parliament are scrambling for 5year US$30
000 vehicle loans. Aside a few, parliament is their only source
of livelihood for our MPs.
In opposing
this, the democracy movement has long argued that constitution making
is about qualifying our democracy, putting in place a template that
will give it meaning. It is about defining the relations between
citizens, managing their competing interests whilst promoting common
interests. It is about establishing their relations with the state
and apportioning the degrees of power to those privileged to run
their public affairs. The latter part clearly calls for careful
thought and need for thorough restraining. To give those who have
this power a free reign to decide the nature of power and how it
should be used is a disaster. Our experiences with a constitution
made for the moment has taught us the hard way. Being so, people
have to be at the centre of this struggle. They have to write the
constitution themselves - as citizens, not serfs.
The NCA, ZCTU
and many in the MDC executive council have given guard to this truth.
They have asked parliament to back off from leading the constitution
making exercise and called for the establishment of an Independent
Constitutional Commission. The Commission should be established
through an open and transparent process. Such a commission should
not only be independent but also be seen to be independent. No group
- whether political parties, the executive, parliament, NGOs
etc should have more privileges than others in this process. All
citizens irrespective of social, economic or political status should
be equalized, and their opinions and views must be held with the
same weight. This is the principal upon which a people driven constitution
is made.
Parliament-s
role should be to safeguard the independence of such a commission
from the 'obvious hand- of the executive. The executive
has a significant role in ensuring that the necessary resources
are allocated, through parliament, to the Commission. In participating
in the processes of the Commission, members of parliament and the
executive would do so as any other citizen would.
The struggle
for a new constitution should not be seen as an aside battle. It
is the soul of the last decade-s fight for democracy and change.
The moment we are in provides ample space to re-engage the masses
of our people and reaffirm that the tragedies of 1979 at Lancaster
will not be repeated. Such a call requires us to look at the transitional
arrangement not as a seat of compromise, but a platform to advance
the frontiers of the fight for freedom and the end of tyranny. So
the next Mugabe-s kind tell us that there will be no 'mass
party-, we should be able to shout back for generations to
hear that: writing a constitution is not dinner for three.
*Tapera
Kapuya writes in his personal capacity
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