Wednesday, July 13, 2016

The Referendum - an orchestra of noise!



“If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they don't want to hear."
- George Orwell


Eish! I have been reading the Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) Bill No. 37 of 2016 (NAB 37) with a microscope, and I am still scratching my head. The noise is unbearable. Here it is.

On the Bill of Rights, first and foremost why is,  the right to take part in government and to vote, still not proposed to be enshrined in our bill of rights? Instead, we are proposing "A citizen has a right to participate in political activities" in Article 24 (General political rights), which is not the same as the right to vote!

The franchise, is still buried in Article 46 of the Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) No. 2 of 2016. Or we have never read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which in Article 21(1) states, “Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives”.

Further, Protection from inhuman treatment, Article 15 of the existing Constitution, has now been denigrated by merging it to read as “Security of person and protection from inhuman treatment” (proposed Article 17). This now reads as, "(1) A person has the right to security of the person which includes the right not to be subjected to human trafficking (2) A person has the right not to be - (a) subjected to torture; or (b) treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or degrading manner".

Didn’t the draftees realise that the proposed Article 17 is simply two different rights and freedoms? That is, (1) A person has the right not to be subjected to human trafficking; and (2) A person has the right not to be subjected to torture or treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or degrading manner – which is Freedom from torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and punishment!

And what was  wrong with “A person shall not be subjected to torture, or to inhuman or degrading punishment or other like treatment”, as is provided in Article 15 of the existing Constitution?

Then, there is the so-called momentous economic and social rights.

Article 45. Progressive realisation of economic, social, cultural and environmental rights, states:
(1) The State shall take reasonable measures for the progressive realisation of economic, social, cultural and environmental rights.
(2) Where a claim is made against the Sate on the nonrealisation of an economic, social, cultural and environmental right, it is the responsibility of the State to show that the resources are not available.
(3) The Constitutional Court shall not interfere with a decision by the State concerning the allocation of available resources for the progressive realisation of economic, social, cultural and environmental rights.

Wait a minute!

Does sub-article 3, mean the Constitutional Court can not adjudicate that the allocation of available resources is not reasonable, as has been evidenced before in this country of my birth?

If so, is this not contrary to Article  1 (5) of the Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) No. 2 of 2016, which reads, “A matter relating to this Constitution shall be heard by the Constitutional Court”? What then is the point of the Constitutional Court hearing a matter, where the Constitution gives the State the power not to even bother to show reasonableness?

Articles 52, 53, 54, under the section "Non Derogable Rights and Freedoms, Limitations and Derogations", are all contrary to the rationale for the review of the Bill of Rights. That is, the enjoyment of rights and freedoms under the current Constitution is subject to derogation clauses, that restrict or limit enjoyment of rights and freedoms on the evidenced unconvincing grounds of defence, public safety, public order, public morality and public health.

Yet, this is what the draft precisely does in Article 54! Sic.

Article 54 (Limitations and restrictions under law), "A law that limits or restricts a right or freedom is valid only to the extent that the law - (a) is reasonably required in the interest of public defence and security, public safety, public order, public morality, public health, blah, blah....."

Oops! And we still want to murder the murderer, for capital offences! Yet, the  Constitution Review Commission Report of 2005, notes, “The Commission observes that a very large number of petitioners made submissions on this subject. The majority expressed the view that the death penalty should be abolished while others expressed the view that the death penalty should be maintained”.

The orchestra of noise gets louder on alteration/amendment of the Constitution.

Article 79 (Alteration of Constitution) sub-article 3 of the existing Constitution states, “A bill for the alteration of Part III of this Constitution or of this Article shall not be passed unless before the first reading of the bill in the National Assembly it has been put to a National referendum with or without amendment by not less than fifty per cent of persons entitled to be registered as voters for the purposes of Presidential and parliamentary elections”. Part III is the Bill of Rights.

On the other hand, NAB 37, proposes in Article 303(1), "A Bill to amend the Bill of Rights, Article 1, Article 4, Article 5, Article 47 (1) and (2), Article 106, Article 110(1), Article 116, Article 117, Article 301, Article 302 or this Article shall be by a referendum and in accordance with this Article.

These Articles, herein, are:
Article 303(1) -  "A Bill to amend the Bill of Rights”.

Article 1 – “Short title”.

Article 4 – “Republic of Zambia”.

Article 5 - Printing and publication of Constitution - "The Constitution may be printed and published by the Government Printer separately from this Act, and the production of a copy of the Constitution purporting to be so printed shall be prima facie evidence in courts and for all purposes in connection with the Constitution as its provisions". This is a referendum issue?

Article 47 (1) and (2), is a complexity! In NAB 37 it is,  "Further protections and rights relating to marriage and family". In Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) No. 2 of 2016, it is Electoral systems! Which one is correct?

Article 106 – “Tenure of office of President and vacancy”.

Article 110(1) – “There shall be a Vice-President for the Republic who shall be the running mate to a presidential candidate in a presidential election”.

Article 116 - Ministers. (1) for instance reads, "The President shall appoint a prescribed number of Members of Parliament as Ministers", and Article 117 - Provincial Minister! Are these referendum issues?

It is inarguable that, the foregoing on the rationale for a referendum, shows a clear case for simplicity and clarity of reason as evident in the current constitution.

Exactly, what are we changing? Does what we say really matter? My opinion. Zilch.

I am voting NO during Lefeli Ndambo! It is simply an orchestra of noise.

Verbum satis sapienti.

Friday, March 18, 2016

My grandmother is in putrefied power




“Sometimes I think the world is divided into those who have a comfortable relationship with power and those who have a naturally adversarial relationship with power.” - Arundhati Roy


Saturday,March 12, 2016, set my grandmother on an unfortunate pinnacle of joy. “If I was there, I would have spat on them. Huh! We are in power and they can not embarrass us like that.” Would not really imagine her thick foul tobacco sputum landing on anybody. But that is my lovely grandmother. Always, willing to die for her belief in a friend in leadership. In her unfettered support, which is simply a façade of an uninformed error, that her friend is in power always makes her believe she is in power too.

In truth, in the January 2015 elections, my grandmother crossed out the person she disliked the most. She claims that is what she was taught during some so-called voter education community workshop. We have never believed her, as she has as a minimum a Form 5 certificate, and before retirement she was a head teacher of English. Could be, she is just used to crossing out wrong spellings in English!

I have never really understood how she is in power. All I know is she spends her days, sweating in the heat of the noon day sun. The steaming vapour from her seven-days cooking drums covering her, like the morning mist in the valley. Those that imbibe in her product often extol her brewing skills, but they never ask themselves why they always have to immediately run to relieve themselves in the bush. Her calabashes are putrid. She never bothers to clean them, before she refills them.

Perhaps, that is what power does. Putrefying the others, for gain at all costs!

Anyway, at the end of the day, she sits lonely on her three-legged stool counting the little coins she has made. And, in the solitude of her Tshaka Zulu – like dwelling, a tear falls as she realizes she seldom makes enough to met her livelihood needs. In the rainy season, her sleep is always disturbed, not because she is dreaming of the happy days of her youth on the Copperbelt. No. It is simply because she has to find a position that is not directly below the rain falling through the old thatch roof.

When morning comes, to the phone she takes. Like the swallows take to the skies after a rain storm. And we, the grandchildren, have a disturbed day. The demands and requests for assistance are uttered faster than Usain Bolt runs.

Yesterday, I had enough. I simply told her that she is in power! So she surely should be the one ensuring that we do not have constrained livelihoods. She should allow us to parade in the regalia expressing our political choice and not delighting in wanting to bath us in thick foul tobacco sputum.

Well, that got to her. In her attempt to soothe my anger, she went into a delirious single-person-audience oratory of how her friend will soon be organising a conference to reaffirm his abhorrence of political party violence. She, further, said that he has also demanded that opposition party leaders emulate him in controlling violence. Adolf Hitler would have been proud. Sic.

I listened to her unthinking wisdom, the wisdom of putrefied power, with ears requesting me to shut her up. I could not do that, however.

The public know, sincerely hope they do, that they cannot emulate a State president when it comes to matters of law and order.

In hindsight, was her friend talking as a State president or a party president? If the latter, it is understood and welcome. However, I am not going to start a sermon on the mountain over it.

If the former, it is unfortunate. He is a State president, and there is nothing to emulate. He should simply have categorically stated that the State of Zambia will not tolerate political violence and chastise those that stripped Priscilla Mwiinga naked, the police officers that did nothing about it, and the head of the police. Period.

What happened to the State shall protect its citizens and all those presently resident within its borders? Inarguably, if the State cannot do so, then this brings into question the State’s allegiance to protecting its citizens and all those presently resident within its borders through just maintenance of law and order.

The bottom line is. A State president or any third party, conceiving an idea of a conference to iron out political party violence is simply a deliberate invalid argument displaying assumed political ingenuity in reasoning. It is a delusional hope of deceiving the public. So too, is a State hollering out to the multitude to emulate it.

A democratic State exists as a body of humans with defined means of equitable social and political regulation. The State affirms adherence to the norms actualising these means. It cannot request others to emulate it in maintaining law and order with respect to violence arising from political competition, when it is evidently shows favouritism. That is a recipe for State decay.

Clean the calabash, remove the maggots first, then I will not run into the bush after imbibing your rhetoric.

I could not tell my grandmother all this. I love Nana dearly. She typifies the many of us that exist in limbus factuorum. Those that are in putrefied power. Moreover, I dread the thought of that sputum or her friend falling on me like a ton of bricks.

O temporal! O more! What times! What manners!

(First published