The East African Court of Justice (EACJ) is this week expected to make a
critical ruling on Uganda President Yoweri Museveni’s bid to contest in
next year’s General Election. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GORUP
The East African Court of Justice (EACJ) is this week expected
to make a critical ruling on Uganda President Yoweri Museveni’s bid to
extend his 34-year rule of the country by contesting in next year’s
General Election.
In a petition filed
by Kampala-based lawyer Male H. Mabirizi K. Kiwanuka, the EACJ has been
asked to determine whether a decision by the Constitutional Court of
Uganda to extend the presidential term and age limit is against the East
African Community (EAC) Treaty on democracy and good governance.
Mr
Mabirizi, who is representing himself at the Arusha-based court, is
seeking “interim order of injunction restraining the Government of the
Republic of Uganda, from implementing any of the provisions of the
Uganda Constitution (Amendment) Act, 2018.”
The ruling on the application is set for Friday, February 6.
In
its response, the Uganda government, represented by Principal State
Attorney George Kallemera, has defended the decision to extend the
presidential term and age limit, dismissing the application as
“frivolous, vexatious and not demonstrating a prima facie case with a probability of success.”
“The
applicant has not in any way demonstrated that he will suffer
irreparable injury that cannot be compensated by an award of damages,”
the AG argues.
One of Africa's longest-serving leaders,
President Museveni signed a Bill into law that removed the presidential
age limit of 75 from the country's Constitution following a vote by the
Ugandan Parliament in 2017.
The
Ugandan Constitution, enacted in 1995, previously prohibited anyone
younger than 35 or older than 75 from serving as president.
The
EACJ, whose decisions are binding on member states, has been viewed as
an independent court whose recent decisions have rattled the EAC
governments.
The Ugandan legal team
will further be supported by more than 10 lawyers in the case, a pointer
that the government is not taking the case lightly.
The
constitutional amendment allows the 73-year-old president to run for a
sixth term in next year’s polls, an outcome which Mr Mabirizi is opposed
to.
In his application before a
three-judge Bench, Mr Mabirizi, is contesting the manner in which the
Ugandan Parliament amended the Constitution which saw, among others, the
presidential age limit scrapped, presidential and parliamentary tenures
extended from five to seven years.
ORDERLY SUCCESSION
Mr
Mabirizi argues that the framers of the 1995 Constitution deemed it
absolutely necessary to enshrine within the text of the Constitution,
the two-term presidential cap, presidential age and abolition of the
Kelsenian theory under Article 3 of the Ugandan Constitution.
“Such
provision as would be necessary to give effect and operationalise the
ideals encapsulated in the preamble as well the national objectives and
directive principles of State Policy,” Mabirizi argues in his
application.
These provisions, he
argues, were designed and intended to guarantee orderly succession to
power and political stability “which, to date, remains a mirage for
Uganda.”
He argues that by amending
Article 102(b) to remove the presidential age limit, after the earlier
scrapping of term limits, Parliament rendered ineffective the preamble
to the Constitution and also destroyed the basic features of the 1995
Constitution thereby rendering it “hollow and a mere paper tiger”.
He
wants the East African Court of Justice (EACJ) to halt the
implementation of the Uganda Electoral Commission Strategic Plan and
Road Map for the 2020/2021 electoral period.
The
case comes at a time when Uganda is preparing for next year’s
presidential election, in which President Museveni is expected to vie.
Mr
Mabirizi is concerned that the decision taken by the constitutional
Court of Uganda raises serious issues for consideration on the rule of
law, democratic governance and universally accepted standards of human
rights.
“I am seeking the Court to
halt all the processes and/or preparations for 2020/2021 general
elections including but not limited to undertaking any step in pursuit
of amendments to electoral laws to align with the Uganda Constitution
(Amendment) Act 2018, recruitment of employees, calling for bids and/or
entering contracts, gazetting and publishing of polling stations,
display and updating of the National Voters Register, issuing of
nomination documents, nomination of candidates, conducting of elections
and declaration of election results until final determination of this
matter pending before this Court.”
RULE OF LAW
Mr
Mabirizi adds, “In Uganda, laws remain in doubt until all legal
challenges against such proposed laws are resolved. That, there is
imminent danger of implementing the challenged Act before determination
of the Reference.”
He contends that
he shall suffer irreparable damage if the challenged Act is implemented
since subjecting him and Ugandans to a law “whose process is under
challenge for having infringed on the core principles of the rule of
law, democratic governance and universally accepted standards of human
rights cannot be adequately compensated by damages”.
He
adds that “damages arising out of matters of rule of law, democracy and
good governance are matters that cannot be atoned to by way of damages.
Further, the balance of convenience is in favour of granting the
application.”
The application arose following a case in which he lost in the Constitution court at Mbale, Uganda.
Mabirizi
has often argued that the entrenched articles of the Constitution
cannot be amended by Parliament under the general powers conferred on it
to make law as envisaged under the provisions of Articles 79 and 259 of
the Constitution.
“Only the people can amend these Articles pursuant to the provision of (Article 1(4)) of the Constitution.”
The Ugandan AG, however, argues that a decision against the State would prevent the holding of elections resulting in “anarchy’.
“The
grant of an interim order would halt the implementation of the Uganda’s
general elections roadmap for 2020/2021 electoral period and all
related plans with the effect of destabilising Uganda’s constitutional
order which will lead to anarchy,” says Kallemera.
“We, therefore, pray for dismissal of the application with costs.”
***
ABOUT THE PLAINTIFFHassan Male Mabirizi Kiwanuka, a Kampala-based lawyer, is not new to controversy.Mabirizi shot to fame when he sued Buganda’s Kabaka Ronald Muwenda Mutebi for illegally collecting land fees (Busuulu) and demanded, among other things, for a disclosure of his bank account details.His well-articulated submission during the age limit case at the Constitutional Court in Mbale earned him even more attention.Born in 1987 in Lugazi to Mohammed Mutumba and the late Ndwaddewazibwa Mastula, Mabirizi, whose mother died when he was only five years old, first went to court when he sued his father to pay his fees, a matter that the court granted.
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