PATRICE MAKOVA
PRESIDENT
Robert Mugabe and Zanu PF are dithering on endorsing the proposed new
draft constitution for the country as they are plotting to declare a
deadlock in order to force elections using the old constitution, senior
party officials have said.
Going for elections under the current constitution gives Mu-gabe,
who has been in power for the past three decades, an unfair advantage
over his political foes.
The two MDCs are adamant the proposed new
supreme law for the country would not be renegotiated as the parties
were already campaigning for a “Yes” vote in a referendum.
The Zanu PF Politburo on Wed-nesday met for the third time in two
weeks, but again failed to come up with a position on the proposed
draft.
Sources said Mangwana was last week instructed to among many
other things, come up with acceptable transitional mechanisms in the
draft and finalise the criteria on the appointment of provincial
governors before the politburo’s fourth meeting scheduled for this
Wednesday.
“Many Politburo members expressed discomfort with the issue of
running mates and the watered-down presidential powers,” said a
Politburo member. “Others are uneasy with the proposal to take away
prosecuting powers from the Attorney General by creating an independent
national prosecuting authority as they feel that this is meant to
neutralise (AG Johannes) Tomana because he is known to be sympathetic to
us.”
He said if the two MDCs refuse to go back to the negotiating table, Zanu PF was prepared to declare a deadlock.
“If a deadlock is declared, the GPA stipulates that elections
have to be held under the current constitution and this is what some
members are pushing for,” said the politburo member.
Another senior Zanu PF official said the two MDCs were playing
into the hands of Zanu PF and in the event of a deadlock; there was
hardly anything Sadc could do.
“The draft is a negotiated document.
There is no clause in the GPA which stops political parties from
renegotiating even previously agreed position,” he said. “There is a
strong argument by some that the party which wins the next elections is
the one which must take the draft to the people. All things being equal,
elections must be held in March next year.”
The official said the politburo decision to reassign and
incorporate members of the disbanded District Coordinating Committee
(DCCs) was a strategy meant to quell disgruntlement within the party
ahead of elections.
“In a way these former DCC members are being made to believe that
they are back in the fold, but in reality they are still out in the
cold,” he said. “There were fears that some of them were going to defect
hence all sorts of promises are being made to them. The party is
looking at the bigger picture which is elections and a constitution
which is in its favour.”
Zanu PF spokesperson, Rugare Gumbo said the two MDCs had no
option but to renegotiate with the party on several undisclosed issues.
“If they want us to agree to a new constitution, then they have
to come back to the negotiating table,” he said. “As for a deadlock, we
will cross the bridge when we get there.”
However, MDC-T secretary
general, Tendai Biti said there was no way negotiations would be
re-opened, arguing that the draft was a compromise document agreed by
Copac and negotiators from all the three parties in the coalition
government.
The party’s national council met on Friday to endorse the draft
and also resolved to campaign for a “Yes” vote in the referendum.
“That document should now be put before the people who should
decide its legitimacy and correctness,” Biti said. “Any individual or
political party who thinks we should re-open debate around provisions in
the draft should respect their negotiators who appended their
signatures to the document, he said.
Source: The Standard
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