Wednesday, February 03, 2010

(TALKZIMBABWE) Parly forced to adjourn after sanctions uproar

Parly forced to adjourn after sanctions uproar
TH/TZG
Wed, 03 Feb 2010 22:01:00 +0000

THE House of Assembly was yesterday forced to adjourn prematurely after rowdy MDC-T legislators disrupted a Zanu PF motion calling for the removal of illegal and ruinous economic sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by Britain, United States and their allies in the West.

Mwenezi East House of Assembly Member Kudakwashe Bhasikiti gave notice to move a motion calling on Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and his deputy, Arthur Mutambara, to engage the United States and the European Union to lift the sanctions that have wreaked havoc on the Zimbabwean economy.

The motion called on PM Tsvangirai "to urgently and unconditionally remove the illegal sanctions imposed, at their instigation on the Government and people of Zimbabwe as confessed in the British parliament by the Foreign Affairs Secretary Mr David Miliband".

As Bhasikiti was still reading his motion, MDC-T legislators — led by Masvingo Urban legislator Tongai Matutu and Mkoba MP Amos Chibaya — rose and hurled abuse at him.

This resulted in about 20 minutes of heckling by MDC-T MPs while Deputy Speaker Nomalanga Khumalo (MDC) vainly tried to restore order. An overwhelmed Khumalo subsequently ejected Matutu from the House.

Sergeant-at-Arms Nicholas Marufu tried to eject Matutu, but the legislator refused as Chibaya protested the decision.

The mayhem continued while Clerk of Parliament Austin Zvoma and Chief Whips Joram Gumbo (Zanu PF) and Innocent Gonese (MDC-T) gathered around Khumalo for consultations.

When tempers appeared to have cooled, Khumalo urged legislators to allow Bhasikiti to finish presenting his motion, prompting further jeers from MDC-T MPs.

The Deputy Speaker adjourned proceedings to today after failing to quell the chaos caused by the MDC-T legislators.

In an interview after the adjournment, Gumbo said there was nothing irregular with Bhasikiti’s motion and it should be accepted for debate.

"Once a motion has been read in the House, it stands accepted. That is why I took it to the clerks and we expect it to be debated.

"As far as we are concerned, the motion has been accepted because it was read in the House. One does not need to finish reading it," Gumbo said.

Chief Whip Gonese said they objected to the motion, claiming it violated the Global Political Agreement.

"It is a violation of the GPA to debate the motion. That is why my motion calling for an investigation of political violence ahead of the June 27 Presidential election run-off was held at abeyance.

"Further, the rules of Parliament are that before a motion can be read in the House, the Speaker should have sight of it to see whether it is acceptable or not, which was not done in this case."

He accused Clerk of Parliament Zvoma of conniving with Zanu PF to bring an "offending motion" in the absence of House Speaker Lovemore Moyo.

Zvoma said the motion had been brought before him and he had duly advised Deputy Speaker Khumalo as the presiding officer that no standing rules of Parliament would be violated by its presentation.

"The Speaker (Khumalo) authorised it upon receiving appropriate advice from me that the motion did not violate any Standing Orders. The motion was then disrupted.

"Rules of Standing Orders do not say motions should not violate the GPA and I have given presiding officers that advice. Those are political questions which parties would agree," he said.

Some of the business that was supposed to be conducted yesterday included the weekly question-and-answer session where ministers would respond to questions from backbenchers.

Chairpersons of various portfolio committees were also scheduled to present reports on inquiries in ministries and Government departments.

Despite tacit admission by the US, EU and Britain of the existence of economic sanctions and their acknowledgement in the GPA, some MDC-T officials still claim there are no sanctions on Zimbabwe.

Speaking on the current affairs programme "Melting Pot" on ZTV on Tuesday night, Chisipite Senator Obert Gutu (MDC-T) denied the existence of sanctions.

"We want real change, we should not waste time on saying ZDERA, sanctions. We need to sit down and strategise on the way forward after Zanu PF said they can no longer make further concessions . . .

"I cannot waste time on myopic issues; the point is there are no sanctions and MDC did not call for any sanctions.

Political analyst Dr Tafataona Mahoso responded saying: "I wonder which Zimbabwe this senator is living in.

"When it comes to foreign policy, Europeans come together and fight a common enemy. It is high time the MDC started acting like Zimbabweans.

"We need to unite against sanctions, if we do that foreigners will have no power over us. The African region has since raised its concern on sanctions, why can’t the MDC see the light?"

Pressure has been mounting on MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai to denounce the sanctions as per the GPA following Miliband’s recent revelation that they were waiting for direction from the MDC on how to proceed on the matter and that some of the sanctions are controlled by the MDC.

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