Plan to scrap presidential elections puts Zimbabweans at loggerheads45 minutes agoShingai NyokaHarareAFP via Getty ImagesAfter ousting
Robert Mugabe in 2017,
Emmerson Mnangagwa was first elected president in 2018Fears are growing in opposition circles in
Zimbabwe that the ruling
ZANU-PF party is making a new grab for power as it presses ahead with constitutional amendments aimed at giving parliament - rather than voters - the right to elect the president and to extend his term from five to seven years."This is a coup, a slow coup that is unfolding in
Zimbabwe," veteran opposition politician and former finance minister
Tendai Biti told the BBC.But
ZANU-PF - in power since independence in 1980 - has vehemently defended the proposed changes. "There's nothing that stops us to change, to go to another system that's less costly, less controversial," party spokesman
Patrick Chinamasa said. The conflicting views highlight the deep polarisation that draft legislation - aimed at changing the constitution - has caused, pitting
ZANU-PF and opposition supporters against each other.This became clear during public hearings that parliament held recently to give people a chance to express their views on the proposed shake-up that will lead to:Presidential elections - held since 1990 - being scrappedParliamentary and presidential terms being extended from five to seven yearsParliamentary elections scheduled for 2028 being delayed to 2030President
Emmerson Mnangagwa, whose second and final term is due to end in 2028, remaining in office until 2030The new parliament electing the next president. "I support the bill in its entirety," a woman said, at a public hearing in a sports arena in the capital,
Harare, last week.Thousands filled the venue, with speaker after speaker taking the microphone to echo calls for Mnangagwa to remain in office beyond 2028.At a recent public hearing in
Harare people cheered speakers who back the changes but opponents were intimidatedMnangagwa took power in 2017 after ousting long-time ruler
Robert Mugabe with the backing of military - and went on to win disputed elections in 2018 and 2023."Term limits must be extended from five to seven years and the MPs that we vote in, must be allowed to elect the president," a man said at the public hearing.When the microphone was moved to the area where leading critics of the bill were sitting, there were scenes reminiscent of the violence and intimidation that has often marred Zimbabwean politics, with pushing, shoving and fighting - along with the snatching of mobile phones and journalists being ordered to delete videos of the chaos.Leading opposition member and lawyer Fadzayi Mahere told the BBC that
ZANU-PF supporters had caused the "commotion" in order to prevent critics from registering their disagreement with the bill.Chinamasa denied that the ruling party backers were behind the chaos."What reason what do we have as
ZANU-PF to be violent when the masses are behind us? The opposition does not accept that their view is failing to prevail," he told the BBC.ReutersZanu-PF wants to move the power to elect the president from the electorate to parliamentBut the opposition says
Zimbabwe is seeing a new wave of repression. In the run up to the hearings, the opposition groups say, the police banned more than a dozen of their meetings. Opposition National Constitutional Assembly leader Lovemore Madhuku said he was beaten by masked assailants last month as the police watched. Biti, who leads the Constitution Defenders Forum, is out on bail after being accused of holding a public meeting without official permission. "We have a history of repression [in
Zimbabwe]," Biti told the BBC.Parliament is expected to pass the bill in the coming weeks, in what will be the culmination of a campaign that started in 2024, with the chanting of the slogan "2030 - he (Mnangagwa) will still be the leader".For supporters of the 83-year-old president, the political overhaul will entrench democracy, ending what they regard as toxic presidential election campaigns that often trigger violence, and lead to results being disputed. "As you know, any election of the president - and it's not just
Zimbabwe alone - . violence is associated with a popular vote," Chinamasa told the BBC, as he defended the proposed changes.But for critics the bill is a step towards recreating the "imperial presidency" they fought to end during Mugabe's 37-year rule.A new constitution adopted in 2013 restricted a president to serving a maximum of two terms, further stating that any move to extend term limits would need to be endorsed by voters in a referendum - and, crucially, that a sitting president cannot benefit from any extension unless voters give their approval in a second referendum.For the likes of Biti, the bill reverses these hard-fought gains, and could be challenged in the courts as, they argue, it violates the constitutional requirement that a referendum be held before the president's term is extended.But
ZANU-PF is confident that it is acting constitutionally, saying there is no need for a referendum as, in its view, the two-term limit remains - all that is happening is that a term will now be seven, rather than, five years.But critics fear that
ZANU-PF - led by Mnangagwa - could be moving stealthily to scrap term-limits."If they can get away with two years what stops them from getting away with 20 years?" Biti said.Chinamasa dismissed suggestions that the bill signals a "dramatic shift" in how
ZANU-PF will govern
Zimbabwe."It's just that for this moment we would want to continue the political stability. We want to continue the economic development that is taking place since his excellency took over in 2018," Chinamasa said. "When his time is up we will choose other leaders."For the opposition,
Zimbabwe is returning to its dark past."They are making the mistake that Mugabe made. That of closing [the democratic] space absolutely," Biti said.More BBC stories on
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