By Ann Zulu
THERE were angry exchanges in Parliament
yesterday between Justice Minister Given Lubinda and Monze Central Member of
Parliament Jack Mwiimbu when the latter accused the Patriotic Front government
of allegedly transferring civil servants in the police service on tribal lines.
Justice Minister Given Lubinda
Mr Lubinda, who is Kabwata MP, was particularly
incensed that Mr Mwiimbu who had been in Parliament for four terms, could use
un-parliamentary language and reduce the debate in the House to a tribal talk.
In his debate on the expenditure on the Office
of the Public Protector, Mr Mwiimbu claimed that Government was making
transfers particularly in the Zambia Police Service on account of tribalism.
Mr Mwiimbu demanded that the Public Prosecutor
should investigate how the PF government was transferring police officers on
tribal lines and on the suspicion that they were sympathetic to the opposition
UPND.
The Monze MP, who is also leader of the opposition
in the House, accused the PF of allegedly lacerating the judicial system in the
country and other institutions of governance.
The accusation triggered angry protests from Mr
Lubinda who told Mr Mwiimbu to avoid debating on tribal lines because Zambia
was a unitary State and that tribal sentiments were a danger to the peace and
unity of the country.
“Mr Mwiimbu is a perpetrator of violence. Why
does he want to draw the Public Protector to his tribal politics when this
appointment is in good faith and for the benefit of all Zambians?’’
Mr Lubinda said that it was unfortunate that
Mr. Mwiimbu could start dragging the Public Protector into tribal talk during
his debate.
But when he tried to respond to Mr. Lubinda’s
comments through a point of order, Mr. Mwiimbu was restrained by the deputy
chairperson of Parliament, Mwimba Malama, a move that incensed UPND members.
At this point, Mr Mwiimbu was heard telling Mr
Lubinda to “get out” at which point the leader of the opposition ordered the
UPND parliamentarians to walk out of the House, which they did.
Mr Lubinda later told Parliament that Zambia
was steadily moving into a higher step on the governance ladder by seeking to
introduce vital constitutional offices in line with the principles of
democracy.
He said Part 18, Chapter 252 of the
Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) Bill of 2015, provided for the setting up of
the Office of the Public Protector and that having such an office would be
indicative of the great strides being made towards making constitutional
democracy and the fulfilment of human rights a reality for the Zambian people.
“Some political and
social commentators have unfairly presented a caricature of Zambia’s governance
record, but on the contrary, there is useful evidence indicating the country
has fared a whole lot better than others in Africa and beyond the continent,”
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