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Constitution process in chaos

Constitution process in chaos

http://www.timeslive.co.za/

JAMA MAJOLA | 25 September, 2011 03:52

The constitution -making process in Zimbabwe is in disarray as thematic 
committees capturing data in narrative forms were locked in heated arguments 
this week on how to do it and what guidelines to use.

The situation throws President Robert Mugabe’s election plans further into 
disarray.

Checks by the Sunday Times showed that 23 thematic committees of the 
Constitutional Parliamentary Committee (Copac) assembled in Harare to write 
narrative district reports and download information had been haggling over 
the exercise, and so falling further behind their timetables.

“We have been fighting over so many issues, including how to write district 
reports in narrative forms and what template to use,” a senior Copac member 
said. “We have even been fighting over typists, after eight of the 23 
seconded from parliament had dubious credentials. We suspect they were 
intelligence agents deployed to manipulate the situation.

“It’s chaotic and frustrating. Each time we reconvene, we fight for days 
before working.”

Another Copac member said there was still a long way to go before the 
drafting stage.

After they had finished writing district narrative reports on top of the 
qualitative and quantitative ones, members still had to move onto provincial 
and national narrative reports.

This has raised doubts about the possibility of elections early next year, 
the time Mugabe wants them, after failing to get his wish to hold polls this 
year.

After finishing its reports, Copac will move onto the drafting stage, which 
is more contentious. A new draft constitution will then emerge and be 
submitted for a referendum.

But prior to that, it will be put out for public comment and taken to 
parliament, where it would need a two-thirds majority to pass.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC-T leader, says a referendum on the 
new constitution is now only likely to be held in May or June next year, 
past the time Mugabe wants elections to be held. But polls can only come 
after a new constitution has been adopted.

Welshman Ncube, the Minister of Trade and Industry and leader of the MDC-N, 
says polls can only realistically be held in 2013, which is bad news for 
Mugabe, who is old and ailing.

The compilation of district and provincial reports by the thematic 
committees through qualitative and quantitative methods was completed 
recently. Sixty district reports were compiled from the reports of meetings 
held in 1857 wards by the outreach teams. The reports, together with written 
submissions to Copac and all website submissions, were then collated into 10 
provincial reports.

Before drafting can commence, the provincial reports have to be consolidated 
and distilled into a national report. But work on this has not yet started, 
because Copac felt it was necessary for the consolidation of the outcomes of 
the outreach process into the district and provincial reports to be checked 
for errors and omissions, to ensure that what the people said had been 
correctly captured. The thematic committees are still battling with the 
narrative reports.

The constitution-making process has been a stop-start affair. The earlier 
stages of the process – since 2009 up to the first all-stakeholders’ 
conference followed a set timetable, but after that the process stalled.

The outreach was scheduled to start by the end of July 2009, but did not do 
so until late in June last year. It was supposed to take no more than four 
months, but was not completed until March 15 this year. This meant the 
thematic committee stage started a year and a half late, and its progress 
too has been a stop-start one. The delays were due to poor logistics, poor 
planning, lack of funding, political party disputes, accusations of 
tampering with data and political harassment and the arrest of some Copac 
members, including MDC-T co-chairman Douglas Mwonzora.

Disagreements about the methodology to be used stalled the start of 
interpreting and downloading data, and the committees only eventually 
assembled for a training workshop on May 3 and started work on the ward 
reports on May 5.

More time was then lost through renewed disagreements.

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