Jukata executive director, Mr Bob Wangwe
Dar es Salaam — The
Tanzania Constitutional Forum (Jukata) yesterday said it will revive
the debate on the new Katiba that has stalled for four years ago to
ensure this year's general elections are
held under the new
constitution.
About nine months
to general elections, the forum believes this is the right time for
Tanzanians to start demanding a people centered constitution to take the
country through the next five years.
This comes at a
time when the government has decided to stay away from the debate on the
new Katiba, saying its main focus was on the provision of social
services and the creation of an industrial economy by 2025.
Even so, Jukata
executive director, Mr Bob Wangwe said fighting for the new constitution
was in the forum's 2019/2025 plan and priorities. "It has reached a
time we come with news way to revive the debate. So one of the things we
want is to stimulate the constitutional debate. In the course of this
month we will bring in constitutional experts from outside to share
different approaches in demanding the new constitution," he said.
He was speaking during a special training for civil society organisations on how they can protect their constitutional rights.
He said many
organisations have retreated from fighting for their constitutional
rights to the point where individuals who have no voice are left to
suffer silently.
"If CSOs do not
know their constitutional rights they will not be able to fight for
those whose rights are infringed. This training is important to
rejuvenate us to demand new constitution before general election," said
Mr Wangwe.
Jukata board
chairman Hebron Mwakagenda said they initiated the training project last
year to identify and strengthen CSOs' positions in perform their
functions effectively.
"Most of the CSOs
have retreated in the last four years. This is not what an activist
should do and we want to strengthen them," he said.
Mpenda Chihimba,
the director of Women Fighting Aids-Tanzania (Wufata), believed that it
was not too late to demand the new constitution as most of the processes
had already been completed.
"It is not late. In
the proposed constitution women's positions are held equal to men. This
is what we want in the next five years," she said.
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