Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08LUSAKA850
2008-08-22 11:01:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Lusaka
Cable title:  

GRZ PROVIDES SOME ANSWERS ON LEGAL ASPECTS OF

Tags:  PGOV ZA 
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P 221101Z AUG 08
FM AMEMBASSY LUSAKA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6169
INFO SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 
AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY
UNCLAS LUSAKA 000850 


DEPT FOR AF/FO, AF/S, AF/PD; LONDON AND PARIS FOR AFRICA
WATCHERS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV ZA
SUBJECT: GRZ PROVIDES SOME ANSWERS ON LEGAL ASPECTS OF
UPCOMING PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION; DATE TBD

REF: A. LUSAKA 838

B. LUSAKA 827

C. LUSAKA 825


UNCLAS LUSAKA 000850


DEPT FOR AF/FO, AF/S, AF/PD; LONDON AND PARIS FOR AFRICA
WATCHERS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV ZA
SUBJECT: GRZ PROVIDES SOME ANSWERS ON LEGAL ASPECTS OF
UPCOMING PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION; DATE TBD

REF: A. LUSAKA 838

B. LUSAKA 827

C. LUSAKA 825



1. Summary. The Zambian government (GRZ) will respect the
constitutionally-mandated 90-day timeline for a presidential
election and will announce the date of the polls after
consultations between the Treasury and the Electoral
Commission of Zambia, Justice Minister George Kunda announced
on August 21. Due to a complex web of constitutional
provisions, voters will choose a president who will de factor
serve out the remainder of deceased President Mwanawasa's
term, which was set to expire in 2011. The Electoral
Commission of Zambia will be hard pressed to meet the tight
deadline and may be forced to make some compromises in terms
of voter rolls and other logistical arrangements. End
summary.


2. Justice Minister George Kunda appeared on national
television on August 21 to announce the GRZ's interpretation
of the legal structures relating to the upcoming presidential
elections necessitated by the death of President Mwanawasa.
Kunda affirmed that the GRZ will strictly adhere to the
Constitutionally-mandated timeline of elections within 90
days of the office becoming vacant, and said that the
government would announce the date of the elections following
consultation between the Treasury and the Electoral Council
of Zambia.


3. Kunda directly confronted the issue of whether the winner
of the upcoming election will serve out the existing term of
the deceased president, which would mean serving until 2011,
or if the clock will start again on a full five-year term.
The Constitution is not clear on this matter, and in last
night's address Kunda ran through the reasons why the
upcoming election will only be for a three-year term to
expire in 2011.


4. According to Article 38 of the Constitution, when the
office of the President becomes vacant for whatever reason,
"an election to the office of President shall be
held...within ninety days from the date of the office
becoming vacant." Nowhere does it specify whether the
election is for a full term or for the remainder of the
previous incumbent, however. Mwanawasa was elected to his
second, and Constitutionally-mandated final, term in
September 2006, meaning his term was set to expire in 2011.


5. Even without directly addressing the issue of the new
president's tenure, however, the Constitution does contain a
series of provisions that, taken together, make a five-year

term impossible in this case. Article 88, section 6 of the
Constitution indicates that the National Assembly can be
dissolved in three ways: at any time by the President, on
two-thirds majority resolution of the members, and when its
five-year term elapses. Article 88, section 7 goes on to
explain that whenever the National Assembly is dissolved,
both parliamentary and presidential elections must occur.
These provisions ensure that presidential and parliamentary
terms are concurrent and create a strong disincentive for an
incoming president to dissolve parliament early.


6. Lest Acting President Rupiah Banda be tempted to dissolve
the National Assembly now in order to force Parliamentary
elections this year, Article 38, section 3 bars him from
doing so. As a last safeguard, Article 38, section 2
provides that "a person who has twice been elected as
President shall not be eligible for re-election to that
office." Whoever is elected president next therefore has a
strong incentive to keep his peace and serve out the
remainder of Mwanawasa's term, in order to be eligible to run
for another five-year term in 2011.


7. The Electoral Commission of Zambia has begun to meet with
the Treasury and with donors to talk about funding for the
upcoming election, but is unlike to announce an election date
until after the 21-day mourning period ends on September 8.
Secretary of the Treasury Chibiliti announced the GRZ sould
fund the election from the existing 2008 budget by
sacrificing unspecified discretionary funding. Initial
indications are that ECZ intends to use the 2006 voter rolls
to conduct the election, particularly as the GRZ has failed
in its legal responsibility to maintain current rolls and it
would be almost impossible to update the rolls before the
election. The 2006 rolls, which contained approximately 3.9
million voters, were the source of many complaints due to
high levels of errors. These rolls will not reflect deaths
that have taken place since they were closed in September
2006, and will not include those who have turned 18 since
that time, or relocated to new voting districts.


8. Comment. Kunda's intervention was timely and necessary
to quell debates about the tenure of the incoming president,
and his assurance that the GRZ will honor the Constitution's
90-day timeline for an election was reassuring from the point
of view of good governance. Questions regarding the election
are only going to multiply in the coming weeks, however. The
GRZ has a grace period until the end of the mourning period
on September 8, but after that and with only 69 days
remaining, an election date will need to be announced and
preparations will have to be made at an un-Zambian breakneck
speed. The use of 2006 voter rolls is the first of many
controversial decisions, and without the firm hand of a
sitting President, there are possibilities for electoral
mischief. End comment.


KOPLOVSKY