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Revolving
of Parliament can provide opportunities
Nhlanhla
Mpofu
March 14, 2012
Recent calls
in the print and electronic media for the Parliament
of Zimbabwe to be moved from its colonially-established base
in Harare have been welcomed in other regions of the country as
a move that will provide opportunities for democratic development,
better local governance and improved service delivery. While other
schools of thought would procrastinate on the symbolism of the state-s
legislature being permanently grounded in the capital city, other
social and economic considerations point to the wisdom of such a
move.
The Parliament
in any modern-day electoral democracy is where power resides, where
decisions affecting every corner of the country are made and the
people-s elected representatives, with the power to influence
any national process, meet regularly to deliberate on the state
of the nation and the future. The national budget and its consequent
implementation can be equated to a bakery that manufactures the
national cake. Is it any wonder then, that a majority of the country-s
civic, administrative, economic and political activities are located
in the same city as the Parliament?
Every company
manager wants to be near the political leaders (whether ethically
or immorally) who have a say in tenders. Every government office
is, by necessity rather than preference, bound to be near the August
House for ease of government processes. National events are undertaken
in Harare for the reason that honorable members of Parliament, some
of whom are members of cabinet, all reside in the capital city for
the duration of Parliament-s seating hence any organizer will
cite the logistical advantage of having the event in the capital
city. National commemorations, conferences, seminars and state funerals
all take place in the city mainly because of the location of Parliament.
Harare is the
overcrowded urban slum nicknamed "Bambazonke" today
because all the three arms of government are permanently stationed
there while other sectors such as the arts, economics and administrative
have followed suit. As a consequence, people from all walks of life
converged on the company in the knowledge that where there is power,
there is money due to the functions, processes associated with the
August house. Hotels, restaurants, fuel stations, beverage companies
and other attendant businesses have also set up camp in Harare.
Local government experts and development practitioners all concur
that the service delivery catastrophe bedeviling Harare is a result
of not only rural-urban migration but also urban-urban migration
as people crowd in the city in search of opportunities, only to
burden a service delivery system created in the colonial-era for
a limited population. The relocation of Parliament, either permanently
to another city or on a rotational basis, shall decongest the capital
city and relieve its already strained service delivery sector.
Other regions
are being deprived the opportunity to fully take part in the country-s
governance processes because Parliament is grounded in Harare. The
principles of democratic developmental practice stipulate citizen
participation as a means for residents to monitor and evaluate national
policy and practice which finds best expression in Parliament. Residents
attending a seating of Parliament get the opportunity to assess
whether their concerns are being dealt with by the legislative body
and also whether their representatives are representing their concerns.
Since the legislature was set up during colonial times, the right
to participation has only been a privilege for Harare citizens,
to whom it is geographically and economically possible to attend.
Other citizens from other regions have to fork large amounts in
travel and accommodation fares to be able to see Parliamentarians
debating, in Harare, policy that affects people in Old Luveve or
Esiphezini.
It has to be
also noted that the international community resident within the
borders of the country has noted the trend and have consequently
set up all the embassies in Harare. This has led to most aid or
funding opportunities going to Harare or areas surrounding because
of the proximity to these offices. All across the country, people
are not aware what the foreign community is doing for Zimbabwe,
or against Zimbabwe, simply because all the consulates and embassies
are crammed into Belgravia, Mount Pleasant and Avondale, far away
from residents in other parts of the country who could benefit from
their largesse. The call for the relocation of Parliament then is
a call, not for the national cake, but for the bakery that makes
the cake. Only that way can communities and regions in Zimbabwe
develop equitably.
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