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SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Constitution
a vexed issue in mediation process
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
By Zakeus Chibaya (AR No. 113, 25-May-07)
May 25, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=335833&apc_state=henh
Constitutional matters look set to feature large
in the mediation effort led by South Africa president Thabo Mbeki
to seek a solution to Zimbabwe's continuing political crisis.
While the opposition wants Mbeki to facilitate progress towards
a more democratic constitution, the ruling ZANU-PF may pre-empt
this by getting its own constitutional changes in first.
Mbeki has been mandated by the Southern Africa Development
Community, SADC, to talk to President Robert Mugabe and his political
opponents. As he engages with the two sides, he is hearing demands
from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, for a major
overhaul of the current constitution as a precondition for fair
elections.
According to political analyst Edmund Gwazai, "The
road map should lead to constitutional amendments which are acceptable
to both parties.
"A new and well-drafted constitution will
definitely solve the whole conflict facing the country. It will
provide a platform for fair and free elections, and there will be
an independent judiciary to arbitrate on issues of conflict arising
from elections."
The MDC has threatened to boycott the 2008 elections
if the mediation process fails to result in an agreed set of constitutional
amendments.
IWPR understands that both factions of the MDC have
submitted letters to Mbeki identifying the constitution as the source
of the present political conflict.
"The talks should lead to a new constitution
where draconian laws will be scrapped to make way for free and fair
elections," Thamsqwa Mahlangu, the MDC's national youth
chairperson for MDC, told IWPR.
Zimbabwe still uses the constitution that was drafted
at Lancaster House in London as a prelude to independence in 1980.
There is common consent that it needs to be changed, but the consensus
stops there.
Mugabe's critics say he has used amendments
passed over the years to steadily strengthen his position and marginalise
opponents, notably in 1987 when the rules were changed allowing
him to become president instead of merely prime minister.
Like the MDC, the National Constitutional Assembly,
NCA, a pressure group calling for legislative reforms, is demanding
that a democratically-inspired constitution should be in place before
any election takes place.
"Whilst supporting the mediation efforts being
led by South Africa, the NCA believes that without promoting a process
of assisting Zimbabweans to establish a people-driven and democratic
constitution as a basis for substantive democracy, the culture of
anti-democratic practice will persist at an extreme human cost to
Zimbabwe and the region," said NCA spokesperson Madock Chivasa.
"Without a constitution that rests on a vision
of democracy, any talk of mediation does nothing but buy time for
the regime to perfect its art of thuggery and abuse."
Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party appears to be
avoiding discussion of the issue in the mediation talks. But it
is likely to rush though further amendments slanted towards strengthening
the president's position. That could derail any effort by
the South African leader to forge a constitutional solution acceptable
to both sides.
When ZANU-PF's Central Committee met on March
30, it decided to introduce a constitutional amendment to parliament
enabling the 2010 presidential election to be brought forward so
that it coincided with next year's parliamentary ballot. Other
changes would bring in a new procedure whereby parliament selects
a successor if Mugabe resigns before the end of his next term -
meaning the head of state would be indirectly elected by a ZANU-PF
dominated body rather than chosen by the people of Zimbabwe.
It is these revisions, rather than a new document
agreed in consultations with Mbeki and the MDC, that ZANU-PF plans
to push through.
"We are not going to have a new constitution
now, and we don't know what they are talking about," said
ZANU-PF spokesman Nathan Shamuyarira, in remarks quoted on the website
of The Zimbabwean.
Speaking to IWPR earlier this year, an anonymous
ZANU-PF insider was dismissive of the MDC's demand for a new
constitution, and refused to say whether his party would consider
the issue if it were put on the agenda of mediation talks.
"They rejected a new constitution in 2000.
Have they changed their mind now? What are they proposing?"
he asked. "It is their problem. Comrade Mugabe has said the
current constitution is sacrosanct and non-negotiable."
He was referring to a referendum in 2000 in which
Zimbabwean voters rejected a new constitution proposed by the authorities,
which would have legitimised the confiscation of white-owned farms
as a way of providing redress for the British colonial past. Mugabe
went ahead with the land seizures anyway, with disastrous effects
on the country's agricultural production.
A fait accompli by ZANU-PF will make the South African
leader's job that much more difficult.
"Mbeki is going to face a problem where Mugabe
rejects a new constitutional initiative and drafts his own,"
said Gwazai. "The opposition would demand an outright new
constitution. The issue of the constitution is going to take up
much of the time."
This is not the first time Mbeki has been involved
in attempts to put together a constitution that both sides could
sign up to.
With Mbeki as intermediary, ZANU-PF and the MDC
draft a secret document in 2004. Mbeki told the South African Broadcasting
Corporation last year that the process was complete before the 2005
parliamentary election, and that he had copies of the document initialled
on every page by ZANU-PF and the MDC.
Mbeki has said subsequently that the election put
the process "on the back-burner" and it was not revived.
Other accounts suggested that Mugabe got cold feet
on the constitution, not so much because of concerns about the opposition
as over a meeting attended by some of his officials which he saw
as a coup plot, requiring him to pull in his horns.
In Zimbabwe, many people are putting great store
in the South African president's ability to find a political
solution and thus open the way to economic recovery.
Esinath Majoni, who is a nurse by profession but
makes a living from cross-border trading, captured this sentiment
when she said, "We hope that the talks will end our suffering
in the country. It's now difficult to survive in the country,
and everyone is putting her last million dollars on Mbeki's
efforts to rescue us."
Zakeus Chibaya is a regular contributor to IWPR.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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