ELECTORAL management body, Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) has washed its hands over the by-elections which Vice-President and Health minister Constantino Chiwenga embargoed citing the novel coronavirus, saying it cannot override an Executive decree.
Speaking in Darwendale yesterday at a training workshop for
journalists organised by Zec, the electoral body chairperson Justice Priscila
Chigumba said the commission was just an administrative body with no power
whatsoever to make policy or challenge the Executive.
“The role of Zec is persuasive, when I say persuasive, from
the Constitution to the Electoral Act, to the regulations our role is only to
make recommendations to the Executive, there is no where we are given a
mandate, firstly to make regulations on our own behalf. Secondly to make law,
we make recommendations to government to the executive, to the line ministry
which is the Ministry of Justice that’s the first very, very important point,”
she said.
Zec announced in October that it was ready to run all
by-elections, adding that it would have run all by-elections by December 5, but
in less than a week, through a statutory instrument, Chiwenga blocked all by
elections.
The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission quickly moved in and
issued a statement saying Zec’s actions could compromise its integrity and
independence.
Chigumba, however, said Zec had done its part in terms of
the law and the rest was in the hands of Mnangagwa, who is a major player in
the elections.“We are a commission which administers electoral law which
emanates from Parliament, now if our stakeholders are unhappy with our mandate;
it is up to them to buttonhole those in Parliament to change our mandate.
“In terms of our current mandate, we recommend the
Executive, His Excellency the President to say we believe by such and such a
time, in terms of administrative processes, we will be ready to conduct
by-elections,” Justice Chigumba said.
“Having put this date in the public arena we made our
recommendations to the President, he took our recommendations into account, he
consulted other stakeholders including the Ministry of Health, I was not privy
to the discussions between him and the Minister of Health, but I would like to
assume that His Excellency using his executive powers and in his wisdom saw it
fit to say by-elections cannot and should not be held during the course of this
year.”
She said her role did not go beyond making recommendations.
“My role starts and ends will making recommendations. I
made my recommendations, they were taken into consideration, I have no further
role in terms of the Constitution to call upon the Executive and say on what
basis did you disregard our recommendations, there is no provision for that in
the Constitution,” she said.
Justice Chigumba said if people felt that her body should
be given more power than it already had, then they should approach Parliament.
“When you go and look at the Constitution and the Electoral
Act, only His Excellency, the President, can announce the date of by-elections.
He does that by gazetting it. He only does that in consultation with us. We do
not have a mandate where we can stand up and say by-elections will be conducted
tomorrow. There is a piece of paper that is signed by His Excellency to say he
has consulted us, he has consulted other stakeholders, he in his considered
view agrees that by-elections can be held on such and such a date,” she said.
Zec has been under fire particularly from opposition
political players and their supporters over allegations of lack of
independence, but Chigumba dismissed the allegations as false.
“It is my very considered view that this is not a
reflection of a lack of independence on the part of Zec, if by independence you
mean Zec should willy-nilly proclaim election dates which it has no power to
do, then I would say it’s premised on the lack of understanding of the
Electoral Act and the Constitution,” she said. Newsday
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