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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Constitution and Electoral laws are not cast in stone
Clifford Chitupa
Mashiri
February 12, 2013
The reported 'plan- by Zanu-PF to 'torpedo-
Eric Knight and Ezra Sibanda-s intentions to run for parliament
(NewZimbabwe.com, 11/02/13) deserves comment.
News that Zanu-PF activist
Jonathan Moyo suggested in an informal briefing with journalists
that the two UK-based parliamentary aspirants faced major legal
hurdles expose the hypocrisy of the coalition government by begging
for money from the UN to run polls which exclude Diaspora candidates.
It was very
refreshing to see Moyo-s argument that Eric Knight and Ezra
Sibanda cannot rectify the legal hurdles based on a reading of Section
23 (3) of the Electoral
Act have being shredded into pieces by legal experts in the
online story.
Among other flaws, it
was pointed out that the residence requirement applies to voters
not electoral candidates and that the provision must be interpreted
to comply with the Constitution, especially not to offend the provisions
relating to the fundamental freedoms of assembly, association and
movement.
Now, what is the way
out of this Zanu-PF mischievous booby-trap?
Fighting the matter through
the courts will take time and inadvertently lend credibility to
Jonathan Moyo-s twisted logic of democracy which suggests
having to fight legal battles (booby-traps) before contesting for
political office.
But the Constitution
and electoral laws are not cast in stone. First, since Parliament
has not yet been dissolved, the Electoral Act can still be amended
to enable Diaspora election candidates and voters to participate
as long as the MDC formations are genuinely interested and not using
excuses of limited resources and suspected Zanu-PF fiddling with
postal votes.
Also arguable is getting
a constitutional amendment by way of a bill through Parliament clarifying
the same i.e. allowing for non-resident Zimbabweans dual citizenship
and the right to vote.
The third option
is for civil society to lobby among others, the United Nations and
the European Union who are being asked by the GNU
to fund the referendum and elections NOT to release any money until
those democratic amendments are effected.
Zanu-PF should
not be allowed to go on cherry-picking reforms and when to seek
foreign aid.
Similarly, the MDC formations should not be allowed to always play
victim by pretending to be helpless when have hundreds of MPs and
senators as well as cabinet ministers who can all collectively make
a difference if the principals do not interfere with their whips
in Parliament.
The truth is that, Zimbabwe
is at its weakest now without money for UNWTO, referendum, elections,
water purification, education and health except for Zimbabwe Defence
Forces.
Accordingly, this could
not be a better opportunity for the international community especially
Western countries to demand democratic reforms as a pre-condition
for further funding starting with the Diaspora Vote to facilitate
voluntary return as opposed to forced removal of exiles.
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