No Exit Visas but Critics Beware - Zimbabwe Justice Minister

15 September 2005 · Posted by David Coltart · Filed under | Constitutional matters | Constitutional matters | Interviews | Miscellaneous | Parliamentary | Parliamentary proceedings | Press reports

Voice of America - news

Justice Minister Patrick Chinimasa denied Thursday in an interview with VOA that the government intends to introduce exit visas for citizens wishing to travel abroad.

Mr. Chinimasa said a constitutional amendment recently passed by parliament and signed into law by President Robert Mugabe allows the government to seize passports from individuals deemed to have tarnished the country’s image while abroad.

The justice minister said Harare will not draw up a list of people whose passports are to be seized. But if individuals “continue” to criticize Harare while outside the country, the government will pass enabling legislation providing for the seizure of passports.

Mr. Chinimasa denied the government was targeting the Movement for Democratic Change or other critics of the ZANU-PF government. He said the amendment should be taken as a warning signal that could be followed by more specific action.

But a spokesman for the opposition party said the government’s move to restrict the movement of citizens already represent a gross abuse of human rights.

MDC Legal Secretary David Coltart told reporter Patience Rusere of VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that passage of the travel amendment was an anomaly.

President Mugabe, Headed for UN, Signs Disputed Amendments into Law

12 September 2005 · Posted by David Coltart · Filed under | Constitutional matters | Constitutional matters | Parliamentary | Press reports

Voice of America - news

News that Zimbabwe had been granted a reprieve by the International Monetary Fund to settle its debt arrears was overshadowed Monday by word that President Robert Mugabe had meanwhile signed into law a controversial bill amending the constitution to nationalize all farmland and empower the government to restrict foreign travel.

Zimbabwe state radio said Mr. Mugabe signed the legislation Friday, the day he left for a state visit to Cuba en route to New York and a session of the United Nations General Assembly. Thus Mr. Mugabe signed the legislation even as his central bank chief lobbied IMF executive directors in Washington for a debt grace period.

One amendment sweeps away the right of appeal by the owners of farmland taken over by the state since 2000 in its land redistribution program, and gives the state full powers to expropriate all agricultural land in the country without appeal by owners.
Another lets the state bar foreign travel by individuals it considers likely to damage national interests through comments made while abroad.

Yet another disenfranchises voters of foreign extraction. The controversial legislation also reinstitutes a Zimbabwean upper house of 65 members.

Opposition parliamentarian David Coltart, spokesman on legal issues for the Movement for Democratic Change, noted that Mr. Mugabe’s signing of the bill was disclosed only after Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono won the IMF reprieve.
Mr. Coltart said the amendments are “contrary to what the IMF stands for.”

Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa declined to comment on the bill signing in a brief interview with reporter Blessing Zulu of VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe.

Constitutional law expert Shadreck Gutto, chairman of African Renaissance Studies at the University of South Africa, said in an interview with Studio 7 that the amendments are mainly intended to strengthen Mr. Mugabe’s grip on power in Zimbabwe.

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