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The
COPAC circus continues
Blessing
Vava
October 24, 2012
http://blevava.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-copac-circus-continues_24.html
The much hyped COPAC 2nd 'All Stakeholders- has come
and gone with nothing much coming out, rather the parties maintaining
their positions with regards to the constitution
making process which has taken too long to complete than anticipated.
Unlike the 1st Stakeholders conference in 2009, which was marred
by violence and chaos, this one was rather 'peaceful-
with no incidence of chaos reported, something commendable in our
political landscape which has been riddled by polarisation and intolerance.
The conference was nothing much to write home about and now that
it has gone just like one of the many money spending ventures, time
wasting with no value added, no progress, to give it a better phrase
it was a useless meeting typical of what the inclusive
government has been holding since its inception.
It was not surprising
that the meeting yielded nothing, apart from attempting to fulfil
lost timelines and values of the GPA.
A closer look at how the conference was structured would give us
a clearer picture of its irrelevance. Firstly, the GPA is not clear
on the purpose of the holding of the indaba, its rather vague, Section
(c) (iv) the draft
Constitution shall be tabled within 3 months of completion of the
public consultation process to a second All Stakeholders Conference.--
Copac representatives ended up saying that the meeting is for recommendations
and not amendments. One would ask who will be giving recommendations
in this instance? From the onset the process has been in the hands
of the three principals, the draft we have is a combination of positions
from the same to their parties. The delegates to the conference
were also largely drawn from the three formations except a few from
civil society who begged for their inclusion or the other way round.
So it is like setting an examination for yourself and marking it
at the same time. It surely doesn-t work. From its framework
Article VI in its very nature is exclusionary of political parties
and other players outside parliament. Section 6.1says... '-The
Parties hereby agree: a) that they shall set up a Select Committee
of Parliament composed of representatives of the Parties whose terms
of reference shall be as follows: (i) to set up such subcommittees
chaired by a member of Parliament and composed of members of Parliament
and representatives of Civil Society as may be necessary to assist
the Select Committee in performing its mandate herein; They made
it clear from the start that the role of civil society was to assist
at the behest of COPAC as may be necessary, meaning that the process
is for parties in government and no one else outside those confines
have a say. You can only be invited at their mercy. Pity some civil
society organisations still had faith in such a process were their
participation was at the behest of political parties. Some colleagues
of mine from civil society confided that they were accredited under
political parties making their contributions to this meeting highly
compromised. They allege that a day before the conference all those
accredited by MDC-T including civic organizations had to meet at
harvest house were accommodation and chapters for thematic committees
were being allocated. They were chanting party slogans and telling
people what to say during the conference, including people from
civic society who were present. When getting into the conference
there was a list were one had to check for his/her name, there was
no list for civic society, all the names of civic society members
appeared on the MDC-T list, the discussions during the thematic
sessions ended up being a contest between the parties in government
rather than objective analysis.
It-s
very much disturbing when civil society is now showing lack of principle
and consistence employing desperate means forcing themselves on
processes which are clearly in sharp contrast to what they purport
to be advocating for. They begged to be part of a meeting they were
not wanted and political parties cleverly put them under their armpits
in the process swallowing their voices rendering civil society representatives
mere party functionaries and spectators during the conference. Kana
washanya pamusha pewanhu unodya unyerere chero zvikashatasei unongoti
zvinonaka. That is exactly what they did. No need of crying foul
now when they failed to contest Article VI which relegated civil
society to 'mere- assistance of the select committee
as may be necessary. Instead of begging COPAC to be part of its
process civil society should take a leading role in fighting mal-practices
and fraudulent processes being done by COPAC. Maybe this is the
'people driven- process civil society has been clamouring
for in the past. When the role of civil society becomes compromised
on political party politics and selfish expedience it becomes a
cause for concern.
What happened to the principles and ideals of the National Working
People-s Convention? What happened to what civil society agreed
in the Zimbabwe Peoples
Charter? These are clear positions which have the capacity to
carry this country forward and this is what civil society should
be fighting for and not to act like a chameleon which changes its
colour based on its surroundings. Whereas COPAC/GNU will be continuing
with their anti-people crusade there are some civic groups who will
still be begging to be part of such processes abandoning their role
as civics.
COPAC has been
a great betrayal and failure, it is a disgrace, undemocratic and
an illegitimate process that has wasted national and donor resources.
They have personalised constitution making for the whole nation
to be their private project, Zimbabwe does not belong to three principals
let alone political parties, that we should be said loud and clear!!!
To show unscrupulous
nature of COPAC - the time allocated to analysing the draft was
rather dubious, how can people analyse 176 paged document written
in legal language, English for that matter in one and half hours?
Not all delegates at the conference passed through the law school,
COPAC should have tabled a simplified version of the draft in all
languages if they were really genuine.
In summation,
the process was a charade, it was exclusive to the three parties
and their principals, no other political parties or interest groups
were invited as equal partners to participate can do for their nation
is to dismiss the dining and wining canvassed as an 'all stakeholders,-
it was just a meeting of the parties in GNU. Equally, the greatest
flaw of it all is that the principals will have the final say as
President Mugabe put it clearly during the opening of the conference,
he is honest unlike the other leaders in the GNU who keep lying
to the whole nation that the process is people driven.
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