Dar es Salaam. The noble task of establishing
the new Constitution is still in progress with only three crucial stages
remaining; preparation and presentation of a final report by the
Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) to the President, formation and
convening of the Constituent Assembly and the referendum. These stages
are not only crucial, but they are also very important because they are
final and decisive factors for the whole process of getting or failing
to get the new Constitution.
However, there are signals on both the composition
of the Constituent Assembly and its debate thereof that may make the
whole institution irrelevant even before it begins its work. In this
article I will explain why the exclusion of members of the CRC in the
Constituent Assembly will make it irrelevant and undone.
While the CRC has remained with only a month to
present its report to the President after the latter has granted the
former one more month up to December 15, last week the National Assembly
in its ordinary meeting in Dodoma made slight amendments in the
Constitutional Review Act, Chapter 83 of the Laws (R.E 2012) and came
out with a strong stand that the CRC will not be allowed to be part or
even sit around the Constituent Assembly when the latter begins work of
debating the Draft Constitution next year.
The decision of the National Assembly to reject
the presence of the CRC contrary to what is provided in the
Constitutional Review Act, 2011 (R.E 2012) in section 20(4), has finally
removed the possibility of the CRC being included in the Constituent
Assembly to give clarification which would be required by members of
Constituent Assembly during the debate.
This legal act of leaving out the CRC in
Constituent Assembly has astonished many stakeholders in constitution
making process and the general public with the exception of ruling
party-CCM only. From interpretation of section 20(4) of the above
mentioned law, no one fore-thought that CRC would be excluded during the
debate of Draft constitution in Constituent Assembly, highly taking
into account that CRC is one of the major actors in the whole process of
making the Constitution and it is the one that made all literary work
of the intended Constitution possible.
Section 20(4) provides that: “For the purpose of
subsection (3), the chairman and members of the Commission may give
clarification which may be required during the debate by the Constituent
Assembly”.
Logically, and within the standard interpretation
of the law, that above provision justifies the presence of the CRC in
the Constituent Assembly in which its chairman and members would be
required (if need be) to give clarification during the debate.
Nevertheless, the provision does not mean that the presence of the CRC
in the Constituent Assembly is not necessary.
The usage of the word “may” is not about whether
members of the CRC are to be part of the Constituent Assembly or not,
rather it clearly allows the members of the CRC to take part of the
Constituent Assembly and also it gives members of the Constituent
Assembly freedom to seek clarification from those of the CRC during the
debate.
The rationale of this provision is that, during
the debate members of the Constituent Assembly may need clarification on
any part of the Draft Constitution or the recommendations of the CRC
and that the chairman or any member of the CRC would give that
clarification and, therefore, make the whole debate smooth and
conducive. Thus, amendments of the law to exclude the members of the CRC
who we logically assume they know each letter of both the Draft
Constitution and its report signals a bad motive of both the government
and the ruling party in passing such amendments of the law and that
predicts ill-will of CCM and its government in giving Tanzanians a
Constitution that can be named as a people -centred Constitution.
To my legal knowledge I do not agree with the
amendments of the law that prohibit members of the CRC to take part in
the Constituent Assembly as prescribed by section 20(4).
Thus, the amendment of the law itself reveals a
motive behind the CCM agenda during the debate in the Constituent
Assembly. Now, members of the CRC will not take part in the Constituent
Assembly, who will be giving clarifications to the members of the
Constituent Assembly in case such need arises? Why is the government and
CCM afraid of the presence of members of the CRC in the Constituent
Assembly? There must be something fishy here!.
The life of the CRC as per the law was supposed to
come to end upon the declaration of the results of the referendum by
the National Electoral Commission as per section 37(1) of the law
establishing it.
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