By Mwassa Jingi
In Summary
This is the kind of perversity that CCM as a
political party with every kind of intellectual it has. CCM was not
supposed to behave and act in the way it does in this crucial time of
constitution making.
Dar es Salaam.In part one of this article last
week, I explicitly put it clear that I want to critically look into the
document of Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), whose contents and its context
aim at overhauling the Draft Constitution on the pretext that if the
contents are left as they stand it will result in giving Tanzanians a
very weak parent law by creating a Union structure of three governments,
which will be a leeway for breaking-up of the Union. Thus, CCM
proposes, among others things, to retain the current Union structure,
but slightly adjust and amend it to make it even better. Does such an
argument hold water? As we will see in the series of these articles, it
doesn’t.
CCM’s arguments against the Draft Constitution are
weak, so they do not justify the party’s stand to continue defending
their interests vis-à-vis the contents and context of the Draft
Constitution, which we all have good reasons to believe that they come
from Tanzanians themselves through the Constitutional Review Commission
(CRC), which was mandated to collect, research, review, analyse and
compile public views.
CCM’s document contains proposals aimed at making
them part of the prospective Constitution. The party underpins its
arguments in the following areas: (i) proposals which were wholly
accepted by the CRC; (ii) proposals, which were partially accepted by
the CRC and to which CCM leaders are satisfied with such an inclusion;
(iii) new things (Articles), which were not in the first Draft
Constitution, but were added by the CRC in the second Draft
Constitution; and (iv) CCM’s analysis and recommendations for the
retention of a two-government system in the Union.
From the above areas, CCM’s document is divided
into three main parts. The first part explains how some of their
proposals were included in the second Draft Constitution (they do it
Article by Article). It says that about 17 Articles, which CCM proposed
to be changed by the CRC were changed accordingly and CCM is happy with
that.
The second part of CCM’s report is about the
challenges that will face the Union under the structure of three
governments as proposed by the CRC in Draft Constitution. These
challenges, according to CCM, are based on a legal system, costs, and
institutional based systems that will be involved in building national
unity. As we analyse this document we will look into CCM’s arguments.
Third, the CCM’s document contains a conclusion
and recommendations for adjusting or amending the current structure of
the Union of a two-government system to make it better (as they want to
make us believe) by taking into account all existing challenges facing
the current Union structure to strengthen the Union between Tanganyika
and Zanzibar. Generally speaking, CCM’s document displays its unfair
stand in the process of constitution making which has many stakeholders
at play. We will look into this question: will the adjustments of the
current structure of Union make it even better? But first let’s look
into the legitimacy and supremacy of the Draft Constitution.
The legitimacy of Draft Constitution
If one reads CCM’s document, one will realise that
CCM does not purposively recognise or respect the legitimacy of the
Draft Constitution and the legal role played by the CRC in collecting,
researching, analysing, and finally preparing the final Draft
Constitution, which is now before the Constituent Assembly (CA) for
improvement. CCM does consider itself as a creature which has the sole
mandate to make a new Constitution by dictating its own terms according
to its own political and historical based interests. CCM forgets that
the contents and context of Draft Constitution are superior above CCM’s
interests because its availability was through a legal process that
involved many Tanzanians from all walks of life.
CCM does not know, or rather craftily pretends so,
that has no legal ground, simply by using their majority in the CA to
both overstep and override people’s views which were legally obtained
through the CRC. This is the kind of perversity that CCM as a political
party with every kind of intellectual it has. CCM was not supposed to
behave and act in the way it does in this crucial time of constitution
making. Had CCM and all its intellectuals realised and respected the
legal process which made the CRC to fulfil its obligation for Tanzanians
to have a new Constitution, it would not have behaved as it was doing
in the CA.
What surprises me most and I hope all who have
read CCM’s document is its persistent insistence on its interests to be
included in the Draft Constitution while knowing clearly that it has no
legal justification to do that against the interests of other
stakeholders who are in need of a new Constitution. The Draft
Constitution that CCM had themselves sworn to oppose to the last ‘drop
of blood’ is a result of the hard work of the CRC that was given the
legal mandate not only to coordinate and collect people’s opinions, but
also to examine and analyse the consistency and compatibility of
constitutional provisions in relation to the sovereignty of the people,
political systems, democracy, the rule of law, and good governance. This
is part of the scope of the terms of reference given to the CRC in
section 9 of the Constitutional Review Act [Cap 83 RE 2012].
The law gave the CRC a wide scope of the terms of reference as stipulated in section 9 and 17.
These sections respectively provided the CRC with
functions and a mode of operation during its period of work. No doubt,
therefore, the CRC in executing its noble task for all Tanzanians
irrespective of their political affiliations adhered to the legally
given wide scope of the terms of reference as stipulated in the law.
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