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Inclusive government - Index of articles
Spotlight on inclusive government: It's not working - Index of articles
Zanu
PF's intention to appoint acting Ministers unconstitutional
Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC)
October 28,
2009
The announced intention
by Zanu PF to appoint acting ministers through the office of the
President is not only unfortunate but it is as illegal as it is
ill-thought.
It is self-evident that
Zimbabwe at the present is on a precipice following the decision
announced by the MDC President on the 16th October 2009 to disengage
the MDC from the two executive organs of Government where it interacts
with Zanu PF; namely Cabinet and the Council of Ministers.
Such a decision,
which was made on the backdrop of a serious history of callous disregard
to the GPA
and lack of respect of the MDC as an equal partner is a decision
with grave Constitutional implications.
One of the obvious Constitutional
implications is that the execution of executive powers by this Government
is crippled. Executive power resides in office of the President,
the Prime Minister and Cabinet. The proper quorum and representation
of Cabinet does not lie in individual ministries but in their respective
political organs.
Put simply, Cabinet executive
power is being shared by the three political parties represented
in the same. That means that if one of the political parties withdraws
from that Cabinet, then the same cannot function and the same cannot
make any meaningful decision. This has been evident in the last
two weeks where this forum has been reduced to a talking shop.
The second critical implication
is that to the extent that the President acts in consultation or
in agreement with the Prime Minister on all key decisions of the
State and to the extent that as a result of the disengagement the
two are not meeting, this means that many key decisions are not
being made. The conclusion on the appointments of Constitutional
bodies and Commissions following interviews held by Parliament is
a case in point.
Given this scenario,
what is required is for Zanu PF to address fully the issues the
MDC is raising. The issues are simple: Comply with the SADC communiqué
of 26 January 2009 by ensuring that there is a full complement of
Ministers and deputies, the issue of the Attorney-General and the
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor, the appointment of provincial
governors; that the National Security Council meets regularly in
terms of the law and that there be a review of ministerial allocations
forthwith.
It eludes our wisdom
why these simple issues should prove difficult to execute unless
of course one was never serious about the inclusive government itself
or one had other ulterior motives.
With regards
to the appointment of ministers, it is quite clear that Ministries
were not appointed at the discretion of Zanu PF or Mr Mugabe. Article
20.1.6 subsection 5 of schedule 8 to the Constitution
of Zimbabwe clearly defines that there will be 31 Ministers
with 15 from Zanu PF from the 13 from the MDC and three from the
other MDC formation.
Furthermore, it was clearly
defined that Ministers and deputy ministers may be relieved of their
duties only after consultation of the Principals of the parties
participating in the inclusive government.
The full import of the
above provision is that at all material times, there will be 15
Ministers from Zanu PF, 13 from the MDC and three from the other
MDC formation led by Professor Mutambara. The attempt to illegally
appoint acting ministers amounts in fact to a rewriting of Article
20.1.6 subsection of 5 of the 8th schedule of the Constitution of
Zimbabwe. Put simply, it amounts to a Constitutional Amendment or
more cynically, it amounts to a fundamental breach of the GPA. In
short, should Zanu PF proceed with their intentions, they are simply
serving notice that the GPA has broken down. If that is the case,
as President Tsvangirai made it clear on 16 October 2009, an election
under international supervision will be the only way forward.
Whilst acting ministers
are appointed, the practice has been that this is only the case
when a particular minister is out of the country or where there
has been consultation between the principals. In all situations,
the acting minister has always been from the party that the substantive
minister comes from. What Zanu PF intends to do is not to appoint
acting ministers, but to usurp the Constitution of Zimbabwe by appointing
their own ministers.
Part of this attitude
is what we are contesting against. The lack of respect, the contempt
and the unilateralism is what has been wrong about the Zanu PF attitude.
This is not a Zanu PF government but an inclusive government. If
they want a Zanu PF government, they must win a free and fair election.
What is required now
is soberness, reflection and the ability to put the people of Zimbabwe
first. More importantly, the honour to respect our own agreements.
We pray that for the sake of the suffering and brutalised Zimbabweans,
sobriety, Godliness, honesty, selflessness, leadership and wisdom
must intervene for the sake of Zimbabweans.
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