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By Saidi Yakubu
African leaders should work to create conditions for development, Malawi’s Speaker of Parliament and outgoing Chairperson of the Speakers and Presiding Officers of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in Africa, Henry Chimunthu Banda (pictured) said during the opening of the 13th Speakers Conference in Lilongwe.
The Conference of Speakers and Presiding Officers in the Commonwealth Africa is a biannual gathering of the Parliamentary heads and this year discussed three crucial themes pertinent to the growth of democracy namely the Case for Complementing Roles of government and the Opposition in African Parliaments as a sustainable way of fostering National Unity and development which was led by presentations from Namibia and Seychelles. It was noted that
there is no model of Parliamentary system that will be fit for all countries but there was a general consensus that the Speaker's chair should always be insulated from government interference.
Testimonies were received as to how 'subtle persuasion' is always used to enable the Executive to have its way. The Speaker of Zambia shared his experience of 13 years in the chair and how he has always been on the border of falling out of favour with a faction within the ruling party for not giving in to their demand.
The Parliamentary heads agreed in principle that public interests should always be above party interests and the Speaker should strive to ensure although the majority will always have their way, the minority should have their say.
Hon. Rebecca Kadaga, Speaker of Uganda Parliament and a constituency MP shared the dilemma faced by holding both positions at once, ''the exercise of impartiality is the main dilemma because you have to ensure principles of democracy prevail as well as advocating the interest of your constituency'' she said adding that the other challenge is party loyalty as all MPs are supposed to toe the party line because whereas it would appear normal for an ordinary constituency member to attend party caucuses, the Speaker cannot because in the eyes of opposition members such a move would biase the Speaker in favour of his/her party’’. Several countries including Tanzania, Kenya and Malawi expressed the same hurdle as the Speaker in the said country must first be a Member of Parliament.
However, Hon. Kadaga argued that it was not a guarantee that having a Speaker elected from outside Parliament would be an assurance of fairness, because such a person could also have inclination to a particular party which might affect his/her conduct in the house. Speakers had a general agreement that impartiality depends more on the persons’ integrity than the system that has put him in place.
The exciting testimony from Rwanda - a paperless Parliament was hailed as the ideal direction which all African Parliament should head. Rwanda, a country with two chambers no longer hands out order papers, speeches or hansard in hard copies rather each Member of Parliament is given a laptop during induction period and all parliamentary materials are posted on the website where members can access or are sent in their emails. The Chamber has internet access and MPs are allowed in the house with their laptops. Furthermore each Member is given a modem for use outside parliament.
Despite the age of most Speakers, they expressed the enthusiasm and fascination with social media with Speaker of Uganda highlighting her experience with Face book and how she interacts with the public.
The conference has also elected Hon. Dr. Patrick Herminie, Speaker of Seychelles and host for the 14th Conference in 2013 as Chairperson of the Conference of Speakers and Presiding Officers for the next two years with Cameroon (host of the said conference for 2015) as Vice Chairperson.
SWALI LA KIZUSHI: Hivi ni kwanini hawa huwa wanavaa hayo makatani kichwani?
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