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New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
The
Zimbabwe constitution making process and outcome: A tokenistic exercise
for the rich, corrupt, and powerful
Maxwell
Madzikanga
May 09, 2012
Hundred years
down the line, how is the current Zimbabwe constitution
making process going to be judged by future generations? I see
many scenarios and divergent camps emerging and innumerable focus
groups deliberating painfully about a noble process that went terribly
wrong. Maybe a process that was sinfully manipulated by a few oligarchs
and salivating politicians.
The Lancaster
House Constitution
was the best that our country ever had at least for now. Though
the process that brought that document into being lacked that representational
spirit and ethos, at least it represented a good start for a newly
independent, democratic and young nation. No one could prophesy
how future political dynamics and manoeuvres were going to shape,
glide and reach maturation. However, the crafters and drafters of
the Lancaster Constitution at least did a good job that enabled
stability and peace to prevail at least for the a few years after
independence. What should be borne in mind is that political actors
of all shades and orientations manipulated and influenced the outcomes
of the Lancaster Constitution.
I have heard some commentators
arguing that the Lancaster document was shaped and heavily influenced
by Western Powers than by the Zimbabwean people. On balance however,
the Lancaster House Constitution was not grounded in reality but
more in the political sphere and the end to end the war of liberation
(understandable then). Some excesses and human rights violations
happened and the constitution had no inbuilt mechanisms to curtail
or prevent or ensure accountability for a series of sad chapters
and derelictions. The Lancaster Constitution sought of protected
war criminals and people responsible for the unjustified massacre
of citizens during the liberation struggle. The massacre of innocent
civilians and the bombing of villages, heavily populated areas and
camps as well as poisoning of water sources was unjustified and
the constitution should have been more forceful and clearer as a
framework. It is indisputable that the Lancaster House Constitution
was a compromise between the then Rhodesian Front and ZANU PF at
the expense of other very critical political and economic actors
including ZAPU. The result was unjustified loss of blood in Matabeleland
and the Midlands province. My thinking is that The Lancaster Constitution
was more a sanitised political document than a constitution representing
the aspirations, wishes and expectations of the broader Zimbabwean
people including the peasants and the disenfranchised. Anywhere,
after, a long, bloody and terrible war, who cared! Then Zimbabweans
across the breadth and depth of that blessed country woke up one
day and started thinking of a people-owned constitution!
The previous
Constitution making process came up with a document which though
not perfect was a massive improvement from the Lancaster House treatise.
The NCA came up with an equally substantive document but the NCA-s
treatise lacked grassroots input particularly input from rural communities.
True, the NCA would argue that the political ground was very uneven,
dangerous and that broader community based consultation was not
possible but the fundamental issue remains, the NCA draft
though excellent was perceived largely as a solo and one person
constitution. It was a sound document "yes" but there
was a deep sentiment that it was a document thought out and written
by Lovemore Madhuku in the confines of his NCA headquarters. On
reflection, I think the NCA draft constitution contained very critical
ingredients that the government could have borrowed, shared with
the populace and mainstreamed into their draft constitution. The
government draft was roundly and proudly rejected. I have met many
political analysts who vehemently expounded this view- the Zimbabwean
people did not reject the draft constitution, they did not reject
the process but it was a rejection of ZANU PF and what it stood
for. In the district I was working then, you would ask people why
they were voting NO and which sections of the draft were unacceptable
and paradoxically, many people had not even read the draft constitution
document. I voted NO and then read the draft constitution later.
How wrong I had been?
This background serves
to inform the current mayhem in the Zimbabwe constitution making
process. There are a number of good global constitutional making
practices and standards that have been followed in terms of conceptualisation,
process and outcomes but unfortunately there are a plethora of other
thorny issues that remain unresolved. The consultation process was
highly politicised yet Zimbabweans aired their views candidly and
fearlessly. A national constitution is not a political and partisan
document and thus all political and non-political actors in Zimbabwe
were expected to unite around this very noble cause. This did not
happen as politicians from the major political parties selfishly
and parochially promoted their partisan position at the expense
of national virtues, ethos, rationality and reason. The constitution
is not about regime change. The constitution making phase was not
supposed to be a stone-throwing, political space expansion exercise,
sovereignty-induced visitations to the rural areas. The forums were
supposed to be focus group reflections, listening tours and detailed
discussions of fundamental, all and cross-generational ethos, virtues,
values and thinking. The consultations were supposed to dialogical,
discursive, give and take clinics and memorable encounters in the
life and history of a republic in general and all stakeholders in
particular. Sadly, this was not the case. A process that could have
been harnessed to promote national unity and reconciliation ended
up being hijacked by political heavy weights that stubbornly postured
and arrogantly promoted their partisan agendas.
The least that Zimbabweans
expect is a document that does not reflect the input gathered during
the consultation phase. BUT. A document that appropriately and accurately
captures collates and synthesises the variegated views of Zimbabweans
from all walks of life however strange the views are. A document
that reflects maturity and values that cross and inform all generations.
A document that is not authored to reflect the whims of MDCs, ZANU
PF, and any political or non-political formation but one that religiously
captures the veins and arteries of the country. What Zimbabweans
would expect is a document authored by frugal, considerate, time
conscious, responsible and apolitical figures. Has this been the
case? NO. The financial cost of the constitution making process
is reflective of a country that cares less of its people and the
socio-economic realities the country is going through. If the draft
constitution is taken back to the true crafters and originators
(the Zimbabwean people who provided the input and who will eventually
own the finalised document)-then for once I prophesy a NO verdict
prevailing.
There is still room for
salvaging this embarrassing scenario. The coalition principals should
for once courageously stand up and relieve the drafters of their
duties and responsibilities. Secondly, the principals should publicly
admit that the constitution making process outcome has not been
successful despite the massive investment committed by the fragile
inclusive government? The third option is to go for the stream -
We now have several drafts and pieces lying all over the landscape
including the NCA draft. Why not immediately hire, apolitical, professional,
non-partisan, reputable drafters and use the document that would
come out of this process for the referendum. A nice name like Constitution
Synthesisers could do the magic. And Zimbabwe is rich in talent,
intelligence and intellectual firepower!
Lastly this
very fundamental and sacrosanct process has been messed up by the
key political pythons that are supposedly expected to serve the
wishes and interests of the republic. I feel sorry for the drafters
as well-being pulled from all sides and all over is not comfortable.
But most critically I empathise with the millions of Zimbabweans
whose voices are once again going to be taken for granted.
Aluta continue. The struggles continues
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