News / National
Chamisa's MP exposes lying politicians
27 Sep 2018 at 14:09hrs | Views
Opposition MDC MP for Mutasa Central Trevor Saruwaka has pulled the rag from under politicians who flush money to entice voters by engaging experts to clarify roles of elected officials in the country's parliamentary democracy.
Saruwaka held the first workshop at Watsomba Business Centre where he engaged Southern Africa Parliamentary Support Trust (SAPST) to clarify the mandate of parliamentarians, councillors and traditional leaders as well as the structure of government after an electoral process in which some politicians made stunning electoral promises and poured thousands of dollars in pursuit of the vote.
"The reason we approached SAPST to clarify issues around elected officials was because of the behaviour of prospective candidates in the just-ended parliamentary elections.
"Some went all out in trying to use resources to be elected into positions which do not require people who occupy them to commit their personal resources to discharge their mandate," he said.
He also said he was also pushed to have the workshop because of some of the expectations people have of him.
"This is my third term and I was concerned that some people do not know my duties so I wanted someone else to explain to them if I would have failed as an elected official by not buying beer or funding funerals," Saruwaka said.
SAPST legal officer Vivian Mashavave who delivered the lecture confirmed that many good parliamentarians had failed to retain their posts despite performing their duties expertly in the last Parliament because they were not "buying beer".
"Our biggest challenge as an organisation is that people have wrong expectations from MPs, they think they are there to buy beer, pay fees and finance funerals or repair roads where we have whole ministries and government departments to handle some of the issues.
"…if we clarify the role of government in development and the responsibilities of elected officials we would remove the risk of people who lie to the electorate to secure positions," Mashavave said.
The meeting also saw different government departments explaining their roles and responsibilities.
"The reason we wanted the government departments like the local authority, local government, Zinwa and others to explain their roles to people is for them to direct some of their concerns to specific government offices for redress," said Saruwaka who has been a darling of the local community for over a decade despite not having any substantial resource base.
Saruwaka is one of very few opposition politicians who managed to win a predominantly rural constituency.
Saruwaka held the first workshop at Watsomba Business Centre where he engaged Southern Africa Parliamentary Support Trust (SAPST) to clarify the mandate of parliamentarians, councillors and traditional leaders as well as the structure of government after an electoral process in which some politicians made stunning electoral promises and poured thousands of dollars in pursuit of the vote.
"The reason we approached SAPST to clarify issues around elected officials was because of the behaviour of prospective candidates in the just-ended parliamentary elections.
"Some went all out in trying to use resources to be elected into positions which do not require people who occupy them to commit their personal resources to discharge their mandate," he said.
He also said he was also pushed to have the workshop because of some of the expectations people have of him.
"This is my third term and I was concerned that some people do not know my duties so I wanted someone else to explain to them if I would have failed as an elected official by not buying beer or funding funerals," Saruwaka said.
"Our biggest challenge as an organisation is that people have wrong expectations from MPs, they think they are there to buy beer, pay fees and finance funerals or repair roads where we have whole ministries and government departments to handle some of the issues.
"…if we clarify the role of government in development and the responsibilities of elected officials we would remove the risk of people who lie to the electorate to secure positions," Mashavave said.
The meeting also saw different government departments explaining their roles and responsibilities.
"The reason we wanted the government departments like the local authority, local government, Zinwa and others to explain their roles to people is for them to direct some of their concerns to specific government offices for redress," said Saruwaka who has been a darling of the local community for over a decade despite not having any substantial resource base.
Saruwaka is one of very few opposition politicians who managed to win a predominantly rural constituency.
Source - dailynews