Briefly, the Historicity of Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3. 2026
Sunday, 29 March 2026
BY Takura Zhangazha*
I first read Zimbabwe's then national constitution in 1997. It was via a course at the University of Zimbabwe titled 'Constitutional Law and Politics.'
This course had Professor Greg Linnington as the main lecturer. With the late Dr. Makunike as the teaching assistant.
Many of us loved this course.
And Prof Linnington taught it with a unique passion. And he had an even more particular passion for the legendary legal case, Inre Madzimbamuto against the illegality of Smith's Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI).
So we learnt about constitutions and politics at an early intellectual age. We also eventually passed the necessary exams while being asked about monetary and employment relevance of the course. Let alone the Political and Administrative Science (PolAd) degree.
Then there was Professor Masipula Sithole who at 8am, on Mondays (I think) would teach us about political ideas and what a 'republic' means via Plato, Socrates and Aristotle in a relatively vague order.
We studied assiduosly and passed exams until we heard of the then Morgan Tsvangirayi led National Constitutional Assemby (NCA) in 1998. And its intentions which were to get then president Robert Mugabe to put in place a new democratic people driven constitution.
We joined the constitutional reform movement which after the referendum of February 2000, half morphed into the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
It was a year in which a majority of Zimbabweans voted 'NO' emphatically to the proposed new constitutional amendments.
I will forever cherish the moments we campaigned with cdes Tovaiteyi Karumazondo and Cde Trudy Stevenson in Bindura, Mt Darwin, Mukumbura, Muzarabani, Centenary, Mazowe with the then foreboding now deserved national hero Perence Shiri drinking Pilsener at the Mazowe Hotel. And back to Harare.
We were sort of naive. Mainly because we believed in constitutionalism as being 'people driven.' And therefore unchallengeable.
In another instance, same year, we went to Mataga Growth point with the inimitable lawyer Brian Kagoro and amazing Mai Lucia G Matibenga a Matibenga.Where in my naivety I sang songs against Robert Mugabe and got threatened with violence. We fled the place after war veterans and yuthiz threatened to kill us.
Then there was the time we went to Gokwe centre with again Matibenga and now professor Lovemore Madhuku. We had a loud hailer where I was the cde who would invite the crowds while the other cdes distributed fliers before they spoke as the national leadership.
At this grassroots activist occasion a Zanu Pf cde out of nowhere asked us why we were insulting 'his' President Robert Mugabe.
And he told me to get down from the top of the vehicle where I was waffling anti-government propaganda. Cde Tovaiteyi hastily pulled me down and we drove off to outside Gokwe centre and re-grouped with the amazing Mai Matibenga to calm us down.
There are two more constitutional reform incidences that we were involved in.
Cde Grace Kwinjeh who was then working for the then weekly Zimbabwe Mirror and had been arrested multiple times for her investigative stories on the war we had as a country in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). She led our team to Raffingora. We met a farmer Brown and she stubbornly told him that the land is ours. When we were on our way back to Harare, she laughed off our shock with a bottle of Bohlingers beer!
The last example I am going to share is that of my elder brother Tendai Biti (boys dzepa Dzivaresekwa).
So blah TB as we used to call him picks me up from the University of Zimbabwe (UZ). We had a trip organised by the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP) in Rushinga. If I remember correctly the mission is called Mary Mount Mission. On our way back TB said, as he drove from Bindura, past Mazowe and through to Mt Pleasant in the Mazda B22 he eventually sold to Lovemore Madhuku, he uttered three words about land ownership in Zimbabwe. Akati, 'This is obscene!'
With Nelson Chamisa and Hopewell Msavaya Gumbo I cannot cite their constitutional struggle examples. They are my Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU) cdes.
However I have cited these other above cited examples to demonstrate that the struggles for a people driven constitution for Zimbabwe were never abstract or legalistic. They have always been organic.
Zimbabweans by way of two previous referendums understand what a constitution is. And what it must be for democracy to thrive.
Regai tione zita remwana.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
Takura Zhangazha
Email: kuurayiwa@gmail.com
Twitter: @TakuraZhangazha