Tanzania has
steamrolled draft amended laws through parliament despite grave warnings
at home and abroad that they will further curtail the rights of
citizens of the East African country.
The bill awaiting
signature brings changes to eight provisions of the law that governs
areas such as
the non-governmental sector, companies, the dissemination
of statistics and the production of films and stage plays.
The Written Laws
Bill cleared the National Assembly on 27 June 2019, nine days after it
was made public. It now awaits the signature of President John Magufuli,
seen by some as a leader with an authoritarian impulse.
Read more: Opinion: Tanzania's Magufuli, a reformist or dictator?
Bill 'aims to kill civil society'
The government
ignored public criticism of the swift passage of the bill, saying the
amendments were urgently required to plug a gap in legislation used to
monitor companies and civil society organizations.
Opposition
lawmakers, human rights groups, media watchdogs, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and legal experts argued that it would introduce
unjust restrictions on citizens of Tanzania.
"The problem is
this bill aims to kill civil society organizations," Anna Henga, the
executive director of the Legal and Human Rights Center (LHRC), told DW.
"Organizations like the LHRC will be banned because it will no longer
comply with the law. Secondly, the freedom of rights groups will be
restricted through legislation."
Government watchdogs affected
The amended NGO Act
will give the government wide powers over civil society groups,
including the right to evaluate, investigate their operations and
suspend them.
"You have to keep
renewing your contract after 10 years. This is not good for
institutional organizations," Jebra Kambole, a legal expert based in Dar
es Salaam told DW. "The registrar can refuse to register some
institutions like churches, mosques, or companies without giving any
valid reason."
Commenting on the
bill, Magufuli critic and lawmaker John Heche noted the key role
non-governmental organizations play in monitoring the government. "For
example, organizations like the LHRC that reveals atrocities committed
by security organs," Heche told DW. "You bring these laws, you want to
control freedom of expression."
The new regulations would discourage companies from investing in Tanzania, he warned.
Public 'didn't see this coming'
In changing the
Statistics Act, the government introduces new procedures for the
publication of non-official statistical information, which makes the
publication of information that distorts, discredits or contradicts
official statistics an offence. International human rights watchdog
Amnesty International interprets the amendment as an attempt by the
government to monopolize national data and "criminalize access to
information."
New regulations
under the amended Films and Stage Plays Act will mean that foreign
producers of films, documentaries or advertisements who undertake
projects within Tanzania will be required to present raw footage to the
government for approval.
DW asked residents
in Dar es Salaam how they viewed the proposed laws. Some said they were
caught by surprise. "Well as a normal citizen, I think we didn't see
this coming, simply because we were not involved in any way," one
resident said.
"Our local members of parliament didn't tell us about amendments. We just saw them through the media."
Will NGOs have to pay up again?
University of Dar
es Salaam student Frank Ngobile sees both sides of the argument. "On my
side, I think there is a move to control NGOs and I think it will be a
challenging moment but on the other side it's a move aimed at
effectively helping NGOs and strengthening them."
"It was not okay
for the government to use the law to ban people from releasing or from
acknowledging some of the statistics which go against the government
statistics."
Another resident scoffed at the changes to the NGO Act saying they were "quite interesting."
"I'm on one of
these non-profit organizations and we only registered a month or two
ago. So my question is: now that the government says all of the
community-based organizations should register again, will we pay the
same amount as we paid during the registration?"
Amnesty said that
introducing a rule that grassroots groups have to publish audited annual
financial reports in mainstream media imposes a cost burden that could
bankrupt the smallest among them.
"Let's believe that the government is doing this with the interest of the people at heart," another resident told DW.
President Magufuli
is expected to face some pressure to return the bill to Parliament for
wide consultation. In the event that he declines to do so and prompts a
major public groundswell, there is recourse to the law, says the
advocate Jebra Kambole.
"If the president
signs it, we still have a number of actions we can take. Our
constitution gives us the right to go to court to see if it's against
the law. We also have the option of going to the East African Court of
Justice, if it's against East African laws that give us the right to
expression, which is important for any democracy."
Fredrick Nwaka (Dar es Salaam) and Sudi Mnette contributed to this article.
28.06.2019
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