BAK
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- Feb 11, 2007
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By The Citizen Reporter
Posted Sunday, October 6 2013 at 01:00
Dar es Salaam.
Opposition parties yesterday welcomed President Jakaya Kikwetes invitation to hold talks to unlock the constitution review process stalemate.
Chadema, Civic United Front (CUF) and NCCR-Mageuzi representatives laid down tough conditions for meeting the President, who said on Friday that he was open to negotiations to protect the review process in the face of antagonism and squabbles among the rival forces.
They are demanding that the head of state declares in public that he will not sign into law the controversial Constitutional Review (Amendments) Bill 2013 as presented in Parliament and will return it to the House for fresh discussion instead.
The officials also want President Kikwete to meet other parties that have protested against the Bill before October 10 (Thursday this week)--the day the opposition intends to roll out joint demonstrations countrywide to drum up public support to reject the Bill. They raised their demands at a press conference hosted by members of a technical committee formed recently to plan the rallies to be led by top Chadema, CUF and NCCR-Mageuzi national leaders. The rallies are intended to galvanise supporters to reject the Bill or boycott the rest of the review altogether.
Those at yesterdays press conference were Chadema MP for Ubungo John Mnyika, CUFs Director for Elections and Publicity Abdul Kambaya and Faustine Sungura, who is the NCCR-Mageuzi secretary general.
The three declared at the press conference that their plans for countrywide demonstrations will proceed as directed by their national leaders. We welcome the call for dialogue but President Kikwete should act fast and meet the opposition parties before October 10 and also make it clear to the public he will not be signing the amendment Bill, said Mr Mnyika.
The MP said the President has left many questions pending, including their call that he returns the Bill to Parliament for fresh consideration. We want to reiterate that plans to hold countywide protest rallies remain intact unless all the issues that led to the controversy are fully addressed, said Mr Sungura.
The officials said the head of states speech was tactful, deliberately avoiding any commitment on critical issues such as composition of the constituent assembly which, in its current form, would mean domination by the ruling party MPs.
We have noted with satisfaction the acceptance to take back to Parliament the involvement of Zanzibar in the amendment Bill but the President avoided the fact that the government sneaked some issues into the Bill, said Mr Kambaya.
The opposition also objected to the Bill on the grounds that some clauses give the President too much leeway on the appointment of members of the Constituent Assembly. They also want the life of the Constitution Review Commission extended to the day the new constitution is promulgated--which Mr Kikwete said could be reconsidered.
In another development, the opposition officials asked Mr Kikwete to take unspecified disciplinary action against cabinet ministers and CCM officials they accused of issuing inflammatory and contradicting positions on the review process. They singled out ministers Mathias Chikawe (Justice), William Lukuvi (Policy, Co-ordination and Parliament) and Sofia Simba (Community development).
These ministers should take responsibility for cheating the President on the review process, said the Ubungo MP. They cannot be trusted to represent the public interest in this matter and we cannot engage with them.
In his end of the month address to the nation on Friday, President Kikwete asked the opposition to drop their clamour for protest rallies. He said the issues raised could be resolved in Parliament but was non-committal on the prospects of returning the Bill to the House when it resumes in November.
We passed through a similar situation in 2012, when the opposition and civil society successfully engaged the government after disagreement in Parliament over some clauses in the Constitution Amendment Act 2011, said President Kikwete, who returned home early this week from a tour of the US and Canada. Why, then, cant we do the same now to avert unnecessary confrontations and wasted energy?
The opposition protests against the Bill started in Parliament, where they moved a motion to stop debate on the Bill until the amendments they wanted were made. When the Chair ruled them out after a vote for continuation of the debates was cast, they stormed out of the debating chamber.
Posted Sunday, October 6 2013 at 01:00
Dar es Salaam.
Opposition parties yesterday welcomed President Jakaya Kikwetes invitation to hold talks to unlock the constitution review process stalemate.
Chadema, Civic United Front (CUF) and NCCR-Mageuzi representatives laid down tough conditions for meeting the President, who said on Friday that he was open to negotiations to protect the review process in the face of antagonism and squabbles among the rival forces.
They are demanding that the head of state declares in public that he will not sign into law the controversial Constitutional Review (Amendments) Bill 2013 as presented in Parliament and will return it to the House for fresh discussion instead.
The officials also want President Kikwete to meet other parties that have protested against the Bill before October 10 (Thursday this week)--the day the opposition intends to roll out joint demonstrations countrywide to drum up public support to reject the Bill. They raised their demands at a press conference hosted by members of a technical committee formed recently to plan the rallies to be led by top Chadema, CUF and NCCR-Mageuzi national leaders. The rallies are intended to galvanise supporters to reject the Bill or boycott the rest of the review altogether.
Those at yesterdays press conference were Chadema MP for Ubungo John Mnyika, CUFs Director for Elections and Publicity Abdul Kambaya and Faustine Sungura, who is the NCCR-Mageuzi secretary general.
The three declared at the press conference that their plans for countrywide demonstrations will proceed as directed by their national leaders. We welcome the call for dialogue but President Kikwete should act fast and meet the opposition parties before October 10 and also make it clear to the public he will not be signing the amendment Bill, said Mr Mnyika.
The MP said the President has left many questions pending, including their call that he returns the Bill to Parliament for fresh consideration. We want to reiterate that plans to hold countywide protest rallies remain intact unless all the issues that led to the controversy are fully addressed, said Mr Sungura.
The officials said the head of states speech was tactful, deliberately avoiding any commitment on critical issues such as composition of the constituent assembly which, in its current form, would mean domination by the ruling party MPs.
We have noted with satisfaction the acceptance to take back to Parliament the involvement of Zanzibar in the amendment Bill but the President avoided the fact that the government sneaked some issues into the Bill, said Mr Kambaya.
The opposition also objected to the Bill on the grounds that some clauses give the President too much leeway on the appointment of members of the Constituent Assembly. They also want the life of the Constitution Review Commission extended to the day the new constitution is promulgated--which Mr Kikwete said could be reconsidered.
In another development, the opposition officials asked Mr Kikwete to take unspecified disciplinary action against cabinet ministers and CCM officials they accused of issuing inflammatory and contradicting positions on the review process. They singled out ministers Mathias Chikawe (Justice), William Lukuvi (Policy, Co-ordination and Parliament) and Sofia Simba (Community development).
These ministers should take responsibility for cheating the President on the review process, said the Ubungo MP. They cannot be trusted to represent the public interest in this matter and we cannot engage with them.
In his end of the month address to the nation on Friday, President Kikwete asked the opposition to drop their clamour for protest rallies. He said the issues raised could be resolved in Parliament but was non-committal on the prospects of returning the Bill to the House when it resumes in November.
We passed through a similar situation in 2012, when the opposition and civil society successfully engaged the government after disagreement in Parliament over some clauses in the Constitution Amendment Act 2011, said President Kikwete, who returned home early this week from a tour of the US and Canada. Why, then, cant we do the same now to avert unnecessary confrontations and wasted energy?
The opposition protests against the Bill started in Parliament, where they moved a motion to stop debate on the Bill until the amendments they wanted were made. When the Chair ruled them out after a vote for continuation of the debates was cast, they stormed out of the debating chamber.