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Namibia: Constitution - A Sacred Covenant


New Era (Windhoek)
 

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New Era (Windhoek)

6 February 2008
Posted to the web 6 February 2008

Catherine Sasman
Windhoek

February 9 is Constitution Day, which will be celebrated tomorrow. New Era looks at how the supreme law has been embraced - or not - by the people and public institutions of the country.

"We have never read the Namibian Constitution," said two young adults when approached on the street. A middle-aged man did not know what a constitution is, let alone that the country has a constitution.

The responses from a number of ordinary citizens on the constitution were mixed - from being positive about the changes that have taken place since independence with the Constitution acting as the supreme law, pegging out the rights and responsibilities of the citizenry, to disenchantment.

"The Constitution gives us the right to speak our minds," said one gentleman, who preferred not to give his name.

"We can live and work wherever we want. The Constitution has made that possible." Others were less positive.

"The Constitution is often not implemented to the fullest," said car guard, Fritz Jahs. "There is too much poverty, unemployment, nepotism and corruption in the country. You have those who benefit from the Constitution, and others not."

A woman, also preferring anonymity, said: "The Constitution is upheld by the Government to some extent. Not all benefit equally."

"The Constitution is often used for individual interest, more so by people in high positions," said Ingrid de Vries.

Chris Mouton said: "It is a good Constitution, but whether it is correctly implemented, is another story. The courts certainly embrace the letter and spirit of the Constitution, but I think the Government should have more regard for it."

These worrying comments belie the fact that the Namibian Constitution is considered as a "shining example" and one of the most progressive in the world, following a process of compromise reached between party and societal lines that have stood on opposing sides of the political, colour and socio-economic divides; a process of constitution-making viewed "without par", referring both to the process and content of the document.

What such comments imply is that there has not yet been a transfer from 'constitutionalising' a new Namibia 18 years ago and making it so.

But despite the fact that the Constitution is often questioned - particularly Article 16 that deals with property rights - many commentators agree that it has, and is, impacting on the manner in which the Namibian society has, and is, being shaped.

How the Constitution Came About

The period before independence was marked by a bitter, and often violent, feud between South Africa as an occupying power, the liberation movement and international community.

Namibia was almost permanently on the agenda of the United Nations, and the Namibian people's plea for independence from South Africa was heard six times before the International Court of Justice.

In 1976 the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 385 that introduced the concept that the Namibian people should be able to "freely determine their own future".

This was the beginning of a change in the political climate, the eventual adoption of Resolution 435, which paved the way for the UN-monitored election in 1989.

The elections of a Constituent Assembly and the drafting of the Namibian Constitution became part of an international settlement plan.

Important, said commentators, was that Namibia's constitutional making became part of the international peace-making operation, through the adoption in the Security Council of the document entitled "Principles concerning the Constituent Assembly and the Constitution for an independent Namibia".

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This document introduced certain conditions. The one was the rules and procedures for the election of the Constitutional Assembly, and several constitutional principles determining the content of the Constitution and the nature of the future political dispensation for Namibia, according to Professor of Law at the University of Stellenbosch, MG Erasmus.

These principles outlined a unitary, sovereign and democratic state; a supreme and entrenched constitution; parliamentary democracy; a separation of powers, judicial independence and constitutional review, regular and "genuine elections", an electoral system based on universal, adult franchise, a secret ballot, and proportional representation.

It also made provision for an enforceable bill of rights, outlawing of retrospective criminal offences, fair administration, and elected local and regional councils.

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