Information and Broadcasting Minister, Mike Mulongoti has taken a swipe at civil society organisations which are dragging the implementation of National Constitution Conference (NCC) and challenged them to disclose the source of their funding.
Mr Mulongoti said the pulling out of Non-Government Organisation Coordinating Council (NGOCC) from the NCC meant that the council was fighting the cause of its funders not the people of Zambia it claimed to represent.
Speaking on Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation (ZNBC)’s “Open Line” programme yesterday, Mr Mulongoti said the NCC was now law and dismissed fears of the NGOCC that the Government would dominate the Constitution debate at the NCC once it became operational. “The Government is not being rigid in the Constitution making process. We have refused to take the suggestion by NGOCC that we discuss social and economic rights as pre-determined issues. The conference will debate these issues,” he said. Mr Mulongoti said the Government would spend K202 billion to facilitate the NCC session which had to sit for 12 months with the chairperson being elected by NCC members themselves.
He accused the NGOCC of protecting its own interests and challenged the council to come out in the open and disclose its funding while describing fears of civil society as unfounded. He said the focus now should be on the content and urged all stakeholders to prepare because the minister of Justice would soon announce the establishment of the NCC secretariat and people will express their views freely in the conference. But NGOCC chairperson, Marian Munyinda, on the same programme said it was not fair for the minister to attack the civil society and described the pullout of the council as not the end of the Constitution fight.
Ms Miyanda said the council would continue to educate its members on the Constitution debate countrywide outside the NCC. She said the council would not go to the conference just to escort politicians hence, the decision to stay away. She said the council had no hidden agenda on the Constitution-making process and maintained that the new document would not be people-driven if the current composition was not revised and social and economic issues not taken on board.
Times of Zambia