Thursday, 16 November 2017

Opinions and Perspective on the Proposed Constitutional Amendment (No. 2) Bill, 2017

By
Mwambutsya Ndebesa,
History and Development Studies Lecturer,
Makerere University
Wednesday, 8th November, 2017

…………………………………………………………………………………

Mr. Chairman and members of the Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee, I thank you for inviting me to share with you my opinions and perspectives on the proposed amendments Bill (No. 2) of 2017.

Firstly, I want to make a disclaimer that the opinions presented are mine and not those of any organization that I am associated with. I will present as a historian but also as someone who participated in the making of the constitution of Uganda, 1995, as a researcher of the Constituent Assembly (CA). As a matter of fact, I was the co-coordinator of a research team of twenty researchers attached to CA who were drawn from different disciplinary fields.

Correcting the impression: Mr. Chairman a wrong impression has been given and it dominates the public space discussion that the maximum age limit for one to be a president or to be in the office of president according to the 1995 constitution is 75 years. I want to make it clear to this Committee and the media here that the maximum age for a president to be in office is 80 years, and not 75 years. Article 102(b) states that a person is not qualified for election as president unless that person is not less than thirty-five years and not more than seventy-five years of age.  Theoretically speaking therefore a person can stand when he/she has just become 75 years and is allowed by the constitution to remain as president until his five year term of office ends five years later in which case he/she would be 80 years old. The cap of 75 years is the minimum for one to stand but not to be in office. For example, President Museveni will still be constitutionally allowed to be in office until his term ends in 2021, but he will not be legible to stand again because he will be above 75.

Preamble: The preamble of the 1995 Constitution starts with the statement; RECALLING our history which has been characterized by political and constitutional instability. Therefore, I would like to enjoin this Committee and Parliament as a whole, to keep this preamble statement in mind as you consider this amendment. The preamble forms the basis and foundation of the constitution. Therefore the important question to ask is; will the removal of Article 102(b) cause constitutional and political stability or instability? My position is that it will cause constitutional instability and by extension political instability.

When we recall the history of Uganda, we realize that Uganda is a young country that has existed for only 123 years, 68 years under colonial rule and 55 years of independence. This is a very young country in the history of nation formation. Therefore such a young country is naturally characterized by weak institutions. Recalling our history, we realize that Uganda and indeed the whole of post-colonial states in Africa have been characterized by weak institutions. Recalling our history we realize that Uganda and indeed the whole of post-colonial states in Africa have been characterized by what is called the big man phenomenon or strongman syndrome.

The strongman (strong president) phenomenon is one of the contributing factors to the slow growth and development of state institutions in our political order. And institutions are greater than any one individual or group of individuals when it comes to nation building. Therefore the framers of the 1995 Constitution had this in mind when they provided for limitations of presidential age limit. It was to cure the strongman phenomenon, and allow opportunity for state institutions, particularly the presidency, to develop.

The strongman phenomenon in Africa generally has undermined, subverted, weakened and crippled the development of strong institutions. The strongman cannot co-exist well with strong institutions hence the need for presidential term and age limits in the constitution. Providing for limitations in constitutions is demonstrably justified in a democratic society. Uganda needs to shift from individual rule to institutional rule. As former US president Barack Obama advised, Africa is in dire need of strong institutions and not strongmen.

Another objective of providing for age limit in the 1995 Constitution was to cure the possibility of one time having a senile president in charge of the destiny of this country. A senile president could lead to the disintegration of the country. It happened in Mpororo Kingdom around 1800 when King Kahaya Rutindangyezi became senile and his Kingdom disintegrated. It caused a constitutional and political crisis in Tunisia in 1987 when President Habib Bourguiba became senile while still in the office of the president at 84 years until he was forcibly removed from office by his vice president.

Discrimination vs Limitation: The mover of the age limit removal Bill, Hon. Raphael Magyezi, argues that Article 102(b) is discriminatory and therefore should be removed. In my opinion Article 102(b) as it stands in the constitution is limiting and not discriminating. Actually if the grounds for removing Article 102(b) were on the basis of discrimination, as interpreted by Hon. Magyezi, all the three paragraphs or clauses of Article 102 should be removed because they all provide for qualifications to be president that are limiting, which Magyezi calls discrimination.

When I was preparing this presentation, I searched on the internet (www.thesaurus.com/brouwse/limitation) and found that actually limitation is one of the synonyms for qualification. A limitation is a qualification or a safeguard clause that is allowed in constitutions and agreements. I went further to search and did not succeed to find that discrimination is a synonym of qualification. Discrimination, I found out, is associated with words such as prejudice and bias which I do not think is implied in Article 102(b).

On the minimum age of 35 years; my opinion is that it is reasonable. Most constitutions that provide for age limits have 35 years as minimum. Besides there is no president I have found out who is below 35 years, except Kim Jong-un, of North Korea.

Basic Structure of the Constitution: If Article 102(b) is removed on the basis of interpreting it as discrimination, then it will have opened the proverbial Pandora Box. According to the doctrine of the basic structure of the constitution, there are certain articles that are fundamental and should not just be amended through a simple process or even be amended at all because they could destabilize and weaken the constitution, thus causing constitutional instability that the preamble statement of recalling our history had in mind and the objective of preserving the philosophy and ideals of the original constitution. For example, if we interpret constitutional qualifications to stand for president as discrimination, then the whole of Article 102 would be required to be removed with all its constitutional ramifications. Article 246(f) would need amendment to allow traditional leaders to qualify to stand for president. There are many articles in the 1995 Constitution that provide qualifications for constitutional offices e.g. RDC, judges etc. If you remove article 102(b), then the Constitution will crumble because it will form the basis for petition after petition referring to the precedent set by amending Article 102(b). That is what I mean by destabilizing the basic structure of the constitution when you touch 102(b).

Conclusive advice/opinion: When there is a dilemma in making an important public concern decision, such as whether to Amend Article 102(b) or not, I would advise that the principle of the common good or greater good be applied. The common good is that one which serves the many. I will explain the common good principle in the context of constitution making, quoting the wisdom given by great political thinkers. Aristotle for example said that right constitutions are made in the common interests, while wrong constitutions are made in the interest of rulers. John Locke declared that the peace, safety and public good of the people are the ends of political society. J.J. Rousseau said that the end goal of any state is the realization of the common good.

Now therefore, the decision to remove or retain Article 102(b) should be based on whether the outcome is to serve an individual self-interest or self-interests of a group of individuals, or the common good of Uganda as a country today and the posterity. And based on the common good principle which I subscribe to, I propose that Article 102(b) be retained in the interest of the common good/greater good of Uganda.

Thank you.

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