|
CHAPTER 1
THE CONSTITUTION OF ZAMBIA ACT
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
Section
1. Short title
2. Interpretation
3. Has had its effect
4. Has had its effect
5. Printing and publication of the Constitution
6. Existing Laws
7. Prerogative and privileges of the President
8. Continuation of office of President
9. Existing offices
10. The National Assembly
11. Succession to property and assets
12. Rights, liabilities and obligations
13. Legal proceedings
14. Transitional provisions
15. Appeals in respect of certain decisions
affecting pensions and like benefits
16. Compulsory retirement of non-citizens
SCHEDULE -The Constitution of Zambia
CHAPTER 1
THE CONSTITUTION OF ZAMBIA ACT
An Act to provide for the new Constitution of the
Republic of Zambia; to provide for the savings
and transitional provisions of existing offices,
institutions and laws; to provide for the savings of
succession to property and assets, rights and
liabilities, obligations and legal proceedings; and to
provide for matters connected with or incidental to
the foregoing.
[28th May, 1996]
Acts No.
1 of 1991
17 of 1996
18 of 1996
|
1. This Act may be cited as the Constitution of
Zambia Act.
|
Short Title
|
|
2. (1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires
"Constitution" means the Constitution set out in the
Schedule to this Act;
"existing law" means all law, whether
a rule of law or a provision of an Act of Parliament or of any
other enactment
or instrument whatsoever (including any Act of
Parliament of the United Kingdom or Order of Her Majesty in
Council), having
effect as part of the law of Zambia or part
thereof immediately before the commencement of this Act, and
includes any Act
of Parliament or statutory instrument made
before such commencement and coming into force on such
commencement or thereafter.
Act No. 1 of 1991
(2) Except where the context requires, words and
expressions used in this Act have the same meaning as in the
Constitution.
|
Interpretation
|
|
3. Has had its effect.
|
|
|
4. Has had its effect.
|
|
|
5. The Constitution may be printed and published
by the Government Printer separately from this Act, and the
production of
a copy of the Constitution purporting to be so
printed shall be prima facie in all courts and for all purposes
whatsoever
of the Constitution as its provisions.
|
Printing and publication of the Constitution
|
|
6. (1) Subject to the other provisions of this
Act, and so far as they are not inconsistent with the
Constitution, the existing
laws shall continue in force after the
commencement of this Act as if they had been made in pursuance of
the Constitution,
but shall be construed with such modifications,
adaptations, qualifications and exceptions as may be necessary to
bring them
into conformity with the Constitution.
(2) The President may, by statutory instrument
at any time within two years of the commencement of this Act,
make such amendment
to any existing law as may appear to him to
be necessary or expedient for bringing that law into conformity
with the provisions
of this Act or the Constitution as amended or
otherwise for giving effect or enabling effect to be given to
those provisions.
(3) Where any matter that falls to be prescribed
or otherwise provided for under the Constitution by Parliament
or by any
other authority or person is prescribed or provided for
by or under any existing law, including any amendment to any
such
law made under this section, or is otherwise prescribed or
provided immediately before the commencement of this Act by or
under the law amended by section three, that prescription or
provision shall, as from the commencement of this Act, have
effect as if it had been made under the Constitution by
Parliament or, as the case may be, the other authority or person.
(4) This section shall be without prejudice to
any powers conferred by this Act or the Constitution upon any
person or authority
to make provision for any matter, including
the amendment or repeal of any existing law.
|
Existing laws
|
|
7. Where under the existing law any prerogatives
or privileges are vested in the President those prerogatives or
privileges
shall, after the commencement of this Act, continue to
vest in the President.
|
Prerogatives and privileges of President
|
|
8. The person holding the office of President
immediately before the commencement of this Act shall, unless he
ceases to hold
office by virtue of the provisions of Article 34
or 35 of the Constitution or resigns, continue in office and
shall exercise
the executive powers of the President under the
Constitution until the person elected at the first election to
the office
of President under the Constitution assumes office.
|
Continuation of office of President
|
|
9. (1) Where any office has been established by
or under the law inforce before the commencement of this Act and
the Constitution
establishes a similar or an equivalent office,
any person who immediately before the commencement of this Act
holds or is
acting in the former office shall, so far as is
consistent with the Constitution, be deemed to have been
appointed, elected
or designated as from the commencement of this
Act to hold or to act in the latter office in accordance with the
Constitution
and to have taken the oath of allegiance and any
other necessary oath under the Constitution.
Provided that any person who, under the law in force before the
commencement of this Act or any other existing law, would
have
been required to vacate his office at the expiration of any
period or on the attainment of any age shall vacate his
office at
the expiration of that period or upon the attainment of that age.
(2) Any person holding the office of
Vice-President, Minister and Deputy Minister under the
Constitution immediately before
the commencement of this Act
shall continue in office and shall exercise the powers conferred
on him by the Constitution.
(3)Subject to the provision of the Constitution
relating to persons in public employment, any person who is a
public officer
and who immediately before the commencement of
this Act holds any public office shall continue to be a public
officer of
the Government after the commencement of this Act.
(4) The President may, at any time after the
commencement of this Act, require any person who continues in
office by virtue
of this section to take an oath of allegiance
and any oath for the due execution of his office that is
prescribed by or under
any Act of Parliament.
(5) This section shall be without prejudice to:
(a) the provisions of section ten; and
(b) any powers conferred by or under
the Constitution upon any person or authority to make provision
for the abolition
of offices or the removal of any person holding
or acting in any office.
|
Existing offices
|
|
10. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the National
Assembly constituted under the law in force before the
commencement of this
Act (hereinafter referred to as "the
existing National Assembly") shall be the National Assembly
during the period
beginning on the commencement of this Act and
ending on the date set for the holding of elections to the office
of President
and the National Assembly under the Constitution.
(2) The persons who immediately before the
commencement of this Act are the elected or nominated members of
the existing National
Assembly shall continue to be the members
of the National Assembly during the period beginning on the
commencement of this
Act and ending on the date set for the
holding of elections to the office of President and the National
Assembly
under the Constitution, and, in the case of
elected members, shall be deemed to have been elected to the
National Assembly
to represent the same constituencies as the
constituencies for which they were respectively elected.
(3) The persons who immediately before the
commencement of this Act are the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker
of the existing
National Assembly shall continue to be
respectively the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the National
Assembly during the
period beginning on the commencement of this
Act and ending on the date set for the holding of elections to
the office
of the National Assembly under the Constitution.
(4) All the functions and powers vested in
Parliament by the Constitution shall be exercised, during the
period beginning
on the commencement of this Act and ending on
the date set for the holding of elections to the office of
President and National
Assembly, by Parliament in accordance with
the Constitution.
(5) The rules and orders of the existing
National Assembly as in force immediately before the commencement
of this Act, shall,
until it is otherwise provided for under
Article 86 of the Constitution be the rules of procedure of the
National Assembly
but shall be construed with such modifications,
adaptions, qualifications and exceptions as may be necessary to
bring them
into conformity with the Constitution.
(6) Any person who under this section continued
to be the Speaker, the Deputy Speaker or a member of the National
Assembly
after the commencement of this Act shall be deemed to
have taken the necessary oath under the Constitution.
(7) All money granted, voted or appropriated by
the existing National Assembly in respect of the services of the
Republic
for the current financial year shall be deemed to have
been granted, voted or appropriated by the existing National
Assembly
and in accordance with the Constitution.
|
The National Assembly
|
|
11. (1) Subject to this Act and the
Constitution, all property of every nature and kind whatsoever
and all assets that immediately
before the commencement of this
Act were vested in, or held in trust for, the President or in any
other person in right of
or for the purposes of the Government of
Zambia shall after the commencement of this Act continue to be so
vested or held
in trust, as the case may be.
(2) Any property which, immediately before the
commencement of this Act, was liable to escheat or to be
forfeited to the President
for the purposes of the Government of
Zambia, after the commencement of this Act, shall continue to be
liable to escheat
or to be forfeited to the President on behalf
of the Government of Zambia.
|
Succession to property and assets
|
|
12. All rights, liabilities and obligations of
the President or any public officer on behalf of the Government
of Zambia before
the commencement of this Act shall, on and after
the commencement of this Act, be rights, liabilities and
obligations of
the President or such public officer, as the case
may be, on behalf of the Government of Zambia. Rights,
liabilities and
obligations
|
|
|
13. (1) All proceedings that, immediately before
the commencement of this Act, are pending before any court
established by
or under the law in force before the commencement
of this Act may be continued and concluded before those courts
established
by or under the Constitution.
(2) Any proceedings that immediately before the
commencement of this Act are pending before any Commissioner of
the High Court
appointed by or under the law in force before the
commencement of this Act shall be continued and concluded before
such Commissioner,
notwithstanding the abolition of the office of
Commissioner of the High Court.
|
Legal proceedings
|
|
14. (1) All rights and obligations under
conventions, treaties or agreements which were exercisable by or
binding upon the
Government of Zambia immediately before the
commencement of this Act shall continue to be so exercisable and
binding.
(2) All functions which immediately before the
commencement of this Act were vested in the President or in any
other authority
shall, as far as the same continue in existence
and are capable of being exercised after the commencement of this
Act, be
vested in the President or the authority exercising
similar functions under the Constitution, as the case may be,
except
such functions as are by this Act or any other law vested
in some other authority.
|
Transitional provisions
|
|
15. (1) The following provisions of this section
shall have effect for the purpose of enabling any officer to whom
this section
applies or his personal representatives to appeal
against a decision to which this section applies, that is to say
a decision
within the following clauses:
(a) a decision of the Service
Commission to give such concurrence as is required by Article 124
of the Constitution
in relation to the refusal, withholding,
reduction in amount or suspension of any benefits in respect of
such an officer's
service as a public officer;
(b) a decision by any authority
to remove such an officer from office if the consequence of the
removal is
that benefits cannot be granted in respect of the
officer's service as a public officer; or
(c) a decision by any authority
to take some other disciplinary action in relation to such an
officer if the
consequence of the action is to reduce the amount
of any benefits that may be granted in respect of the officer's
service
as a public officer.
(2) Where any decision such as is referred to in
subsection (1) is taken by any authority, the authority shall
cause to be
delivered to the officer concerned, or his personal
representatives, a written notice of that decision stating the
time,
not being less than twenty-eight days from the date on
which the notice is delivered, within which he, or his personal
representatives,
may apply to the authority for the case to be
referred to an Appeals Board.
(3) If application is duly made to an authority
within the time stated in such a notice as is mentioned in
subsection (2)
for a case to be referred to an Appeals Board, the
authority shall notify the President in writing of that
application and
the President shall appoint an Appeals Board for
that purpose consisting of
(a) one member selected by the President;
(b) one member selected by the association
representative of public officers or a professional body,
nominated in either
case by the applicant; and
(c) one member selected by the two other
members jointly (or, in default of agreement between those
members, by the Chief
Justice) who shall be the Chairman of the
Board.
(4) Such an Appeals Board shall inquire into the
facts of the case that is referred to it, and for that purpose
the Board
(a) shall, if the applicant so requests in writing, hear the
applicant either in person or by legal representative of his
choice, according to the terms of the request;
(b) may hear any other person who, in the
opinion of the Board, is able to give the Board information on
the case; and
(c) shall have access to, and shall consider,
all documents that were available to the authority concerned and
shall also
consider any further document relating to the case
that may be produced by or on behalf of the applicant or the
authority.
(5) When such an Appeals Board has completed its
consideration of the case, then
(a) if the decision that is the subject of the reference to the
Board is a decision such as is mentioned in paragraph (a)
of
subsection (1), the Board shall advise the appropriate Commission
whether the decision should be affirmed, reversed or
modified and
the Commission shall act in accordance with that advice;
(b) if the decision that is the subject of the
reference to the Board is a decision such as is mentioned in
paragraph (b)
or (c) of subsection (1), the Board shall not have
power to advise the authority responsible for making the decision
to affirm,
reverse or notify the decision but the Board may
advise the authority responsible for granting the benefits in
question
(i) where the officer has been removed from office, to grant
all or part of the benefits for which the officer concerned
would
have been eligible under any law if he had retired voluntarily at
the date of dismissal; or
(ii) where some other disciplinary action has
been taken in relation to the officer, that on the grant of any
benefits
under any law in respect of the officer's service such
benefits shall be increased in such manner, as the board may
specify
in order to offset all or any part of the reduction in
the amount of such benefits that, in the opinion of the Board,
would
or might otherwise be a consequence of the action; and that
authority shall act in accordance with that advice and the
provisions
of that law shall have effect accordingly.
(6) In this section
"pension benefits" has the meaning assigned to it in
clause (5) of Article 124 of the Constitution;
"Service Commission" has the meaning
assigned to it in Clause (2) of Article 123 of the Constitution.
(7) This section applies to any officer who on
the 24th October, 1964, was on pensionable conditions of service
and
(a) was designated under the Overseas Service Aid Scheme; or
(b) was immediately before the 24th October,
1964, a member of Her Majesty's Overseas Civil Service or Her
Majesty's Overseas
Judiciary; or
(c) whose conditions of service included an
entitlement to free overseas passages from Zambia for the purpose
of leave of
absence upon the completion of a tour of duty; or
(d) was not a citizen of Zambia. |
Appeals in respect of certain decisions affecting
pensions and like benefits
|
|
16. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Act or the Constitution, the President may,
with a view to
securing the appointment of citizens of Zambia to
public offices, direct retirement from public office of any
person who
is not a citizen of Zambia:
Provided that a person shall not be retired
under the provisions of this section unless notice in writing is
given to him
specifying the date of retirement which shall not be
earlier than six months from the date on which such notice is
received
by him.
|
Compulsory retirement of non-citizens
|
SCHEDULE
(Section 2)
THE CONSTITUTION OF ZAMBIA
ARRANGEMENT OF ARTICLES
PREAMBLE
PART I
NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY AND THE STATE
Article
1. Declaration of Republic, sovereignty of people,
supreme law and official language
2. Public seal
3. National Anthem, National Flag, National Emblem
and National Motto
PART II
CITIZENSHIP
4. Citizens of Zambia
5. Children of citizens of Zambia
6. Persons entitled to apply to be registered as
citizens
7. Powers of Parliament
8. Citizenship Board
9. Cesser of Citizenship
10. Interpretation
PART III
PROTECTION OF THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS OF
THE INDIVIDUAL
11. Fundamental rights and freedoms
12. Protection of right to life
13. Protection of right to personal liberty
14. Protection from slavery and forced labour
15. Protection from inhuman treatment
16. Protection from deprivation of property
17. Protection for privacy of home and other
property
18. Provisions to secure protection of the law
19. Protection of freedom of conscience
20. Protection of freedom of expression
21. Protection of freedom of assembly and
association
22. Protection of freedom of movement
23. Protection from discrimination on the grounds of
race, etc
24. Protection of young persons from exploitation
25. Derogation from fundamental rights and detention
26. Provisions relating to restriction and detention
27. Reference of certain matters to special tribunal
28. Enforcement of protective provisions
29. Declaration of war
30. Declaration of public emergency
31. Declaration relating to threatened emergency
32. Interpretation and savings
PART IV
THE EXECUTIVE
33. Office of President
34. Election of President
35. Tenure of office of President
36. Removal of President on grounds of incapacity
37. Impeachment of President for violation of
Constitution
38. Vacancy in office of President
39. Discharge of functions of President during
absence, illness, etc
40. Oaths of President
41. Returning Officer, questions relating to
elections
42. Salary and allowances of President
43. Protection of President in respect of legal
proceedings
44. Functions of President
45. Vice President
46. Minister
47. Provicial Deputy Minister and Deputy Minister
48. Oaths of Vice President, Minister and Deputy
Minister
49. Cabinet
50. Functions of Cabinet
51. Accountability of Cabinet and Deputy Ministers
52. Code of conduct
53. Secretary to the Cabinet
54. Attorney-General
55. Solicitor-General
56. Director of Public Prosecutions
57. Discharge of functions of Director of Public
Prosecutions during absence, illness, etc
58. Tenure of office of Director of Public
Prosecutions
59. Prerogative of Mercy
60. Advisory committee
61. Offices for Republic
PART V
THE LEGISLATURE
62. Legislative power and membership of Parliament
63. Composition of and election to National Assembly
64. Qualifications for election to National Assembly
65. Disqualification for election to National
Assembly
66. Nomination for election to National Assembly
67. By-election for National Assembly
68. Nominated members
69. Speaker
70. Deputy Speaker
71. Tenure of office of members of the National
Assembly
72. Determination of questions as to membership of
National Assembly
73. Clerk and staff of National Assembly
74. Removal of nominated member by President
75. The franchise
76. Electoral Commission
77. Constituencies and elections
78. Exercise of legislative power of Parliament
79. Alteration of Constitution
80. Statutory Instruments
81. Restrictions with regard to certain financial
matters
82. President may address National Assembly
83. Presiding at National Assembly
84. Voting and quorum
85. Unqualified person, sitting or voting
86. Procedure in National Assembly
87. Privileges and immunities of National Assembly
88. Dissolution of Parliament and related matters
89. Oaths to be taken by Speaker and members
90. The Investigator-General
PART VI
THE JUDICATURE
91. Courts
92. Supreme Court
93. Appointment of judges of Supreme Court
94. High Court
95. Appointment of puisne judges, Chairman and
Deputy Chairman of Industrial Relations Court
96. Acting Judge of Supreme Court or of High Court
to act or hold office until appointment expires or is revoked
97. Qualifications for appointment as Supreme Court
Judge, Puisne Judge, Chairman and Deputy Chairman of Industrial
Relations Court
98. Tenure of office of Judges of the Supreme Court
and the High Court
99. Oaths to be taken by Judge
PART VII
DEFENCE AND NATIONAL SECURITY
100. The Zambia Defence Force
101. Functions of Defence Force
102. Parliament to regulate Defence Force
103. Zambia Police Force
104. Functions of Zambia Police Force
105. Parliament to regulate Zambia Police Force
106. Prison Service
107. Parliament to regulate Zambia Prison Service
108. Zambia Security Intelligence Service
PART VIII
LOCAL GOVERNMENT SYSTEM
109. Local Government System
PART IX
DIRECTIVE PRINCIPLES OF STATE POLICY AND THE DUTIES
OF A CITIZEN
110. Application of Directive Principles of State
Policy
111. Directives not to be justiciable
112. Directive Principles of State Policy
113. Duties of citizen
PART X
FINANCE
114. Imposition of taxation
115. Withdraw of moneys from the general revenues
116. Supplementary estimates in respect of
expenditure authorised by warrant
117. Appropriation Acts and Supplementary
Appropriations Acts
118. Finance report
119. Renumerations of certain officers
120. Public debt
121. Auditor-General
122. Tenure of office of Auditor-General
PART XI
SERVICE COMMISSIONS
123. Commissions
124. Pension laws and protection
PART XII
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
Article
125. Establishment of the Human Rights Commission
and its independence
126. Functions, powers, composition, procedure, etc
of Human Rights Commission
PART XIII
CHIEFS AND HOUSE OF CHIEFS
127. The Institution of Chief
128. Concept and principles relating to institution
of Chiefs
129. Chief not to be partisan
130. House of Chiefs
131. Functions of House of Chiefs
132. Composition of House of Chiefs
133. Tenure of office and vacancy
134. Oaths of members of House of Chiefs
135. Staff of House of Chiefs
136. President may make regulations
PART XIV
MISCELLANEOUS
137. Resignations
138. Re-appointment and concurrent appointment
139. Interpretation
CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA
PREAMBLE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
WE, THE PEOPLE OF ZAMBIA by our representatives,
assembled in our Parliament, having solemnly resolved to maintain
Zambia as a Sovereign
Democratic Republic;
DETERMINED to uphold and exercise our inherent and
inviolable right as a people to decide, appoint and proclaim the
means and style
to govern ourselves;
RECOGNISE the equal worth of men and women in their
rights to participate, and freely determine and build a political,
economic and
social system of their own free choice;
PLEDGE to ourselves that we shall ensure that the
State shall respect the rights and dignity of the human family,
uphold the laws
of the State and conduct the affairs of the State in
such manner as to preserve, develop, and utilise its resources for
this and
future generations;
DECLARE the Republic a Christian nation while
upholding the right of every person to enjoy that person's freedom of
conscience or
religion;
RESOLVE to uphold the values of democracy,
transparency, accountability and good governance;
AND FURTHER RESOLVE that Zambia shall forever remain
a unitary, indivisible, multi-party and democratic sovereign state;
DO HEREBY ENACT AND GIVE TO OURSELVES THIS
CONSTITUTION.
PART I
NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY AND THE STATE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
1. (1) Zambia is a unitary, indivisible,
multi-party and democratic sovereign State.
(2) All power resides in the people who shall
exercise their sovereignty through the democratic institutions of
the State in
accordance with this Constitution.
(3) This Constitution is the supreme law of
Zambia and if any other law is inconsistent with this Constitution
that other law
shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.
(4) This Constitution shall bind all persons in
the Republic of Zambia and all Legislative, Executive and Judicial
organs of
the State at all levels.
(5) The official language of Zambia shall be
English.
|
Declaration of Republic, sovereignty of people,
supreme law and official language
|
|
2. The Public Seal of the Republic shall be such
as may be prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament.
|
Public seal |
|
3. The National Anthem, the National Flag, the
National Emblem and the National Motto shall be such as may be
prescribed by
or under an Act of Parliament.
|
National Anthem, National Flag, National Emblem
and National Motto
|
PART II
CITIZENSHIP
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
4. (1) Every person who immediately before the
commencement of this constitution was a citizen of Zambia shall
continue to
be a citizen of Zambia after the commencement of this
Constitution.
(2) A person who was entitled to citizenship of
Zambia before the commencement of this Constitution subject to
the performance
of any conditions following the happening of a
future event, shall become a citizen upon the performance of such
conditions.
|
Citizens of Zambia
|
|
5. A person born in or outside Zambia after the
commencement of this Constitution shall become a citizen of
Zambia at the date
of his birth if on that date at least one of
his parents is a citizen of Zambia.
|
Children of citizens of Zambia
|
|
6. (1) Any person who-
(a) has attained the age of twenty-one years;
and
(b) has been ordinarily
resident in Zambia for a continuous period of not less than ten
years immediately
preceding that person's application for
registration;
shall be entitled to apply to the Citizenship
Board, in such manner as may be prescribed by or under an Act of
Parliament,
to be registered as a citizen of Zambia.
(2) An application for registration as a citizen
under this Article shall not be made by or on behalf of any
person who, under
any law in force in Zambia, is adjudged or
otherwise declared to be of unsound mind.
(3) Parliament may provide that any period during
which a person has the right to reside in Zambia by virtue of a
permit issued
under the authority of any law relating to
immigration shall not be taken into account in computing the
period of ten years
referred to in paragraph (b) of clause (1).
|
Persons entitled to apply to be registered as
citizens
|
|
7. Parliament may make provision for
(a) the acquisition of citizenship of Zambia by persons who are
not eligible to become citizens of Zambia under this Part;
(b) depriving any person of that person's
citizenship of Zambia:
Provided that a person shall not be deprived of
his citizenship except on the grounds that-
(i) that person is a citizen of a country other than Zambia; or
(ii) that person obtained such citizenship by
fraud. |
Powers of Parliament
|
|
8. Parliament may make provision for the
establishment of a Citizenship Board to deal with any of the
matters falling under
the provisions of Articles 6 or 7.
|
Citizenship Board |
|
9. (1) A person shall cease to be a citizen of
Zambia if that person-
(a) acquires the citizenship of a country other than Zambia by a
voluntary act, other than marriage; and
(b) does any act indicating that person's
intention to adopt or make use of any other citizenship.
(2) A person who
(a) becomes a citizen of Zambia by registration; and
(b) immediately after becoming a citizen of
Zambia, is also a citizen of some other country; shall, subject to
clause (4),
cease to be a citizen of Zambia at the expiration of
three months after such person becomes a citizen of Zambia unless
such
person has renounced the citizenship of that other country,
taken oath of allegiance and made and registered such declaration
of his intention concerning residence as may be prescribed by or
under an Act of Parliament.
(3) For the purpose of this Article, where, under
the law of a country other than Zambia, a person cannot renounce
the citizenship
of that other country that person need not make
such renunciation but may instead be required to make such
declaration concerning
that citizenship as may be prescribed by or
under an Act of Parliament.
(4) Provision may be made by or under an Act of
Parliament for extending the period within which any person may
make a renunciation
of citizenship, take oath or make or register
a declaration for the purpose of this Article, and if such
provision is made
that person shall cease to be a citizen of
Zambia only if at the expiration of the extended period that
person has not then
made the renunciation, taken the oath or made
or registered the declaration, as the case may be.
|
Cesser of citizenship |
|
10. (1) For the purpose of this Part, a person
born aboard a registered ship or aircraft, or aboard an
unregistered ship or
aircraft of the Government of any country,
shall be deemed to have been born in the place in which the ship
or aircraft was
registered or in that country, as the case may be.
(2) Any reference in this Part to the national
status of the parent of a person at the time of the birth of that
person shall,
in relation to a person born after the death of his
parent, be construed as a reference to the national status of the
parent
at the time of the parent's death.
(3) For the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby
declared that a person born in Zambia before the 1st April, 1986,
whose father
was an established resident shall continue to enjoy
the rights and privileges, under, and remain subject to, the law
prevailing
immediately before that date. |
Interpretation
|
PART III
PROTECTION OF THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS OF
THE INDIVIDUAL
|
11. It is recognised and declared that every
person in Zambia has been and shall continue to be entitled to the
fundamental
rights and freedoms of the individual, that is to say,
the right, whatever his race, place of origin, political opinions,
colour,
creed, sex or marital status, but subject to the
limitations contained in this Part, to each and all of the
following, namely:
(a) life, liberty, security of the person
and the protection of the law;
(b) freedom of conscience, expression,
assembly, movement and association;
(c) protection of young persons from
exploitation;
(d) protection for the privacy of his home
and other property and from deprivation of property without
compensation;
and the provisions of this Part shall have effect
for the purpose of affording protection to those rights and
freedoms subject
to such limitations of that protection as are
contained in this Part, being limitations designed to ensure that
the enjoyment
of the said rights and freedoms by any individual
does not prejudice the rights and freedoms of others or the public
interest.
|
Fundamental rights and freedoms
|
|
12. (1) A person shall not be deprived of his
life intentionally except in execution of the sentence of a court
in respect of
a criminal offence under the law in force in Zambia
of which he has been convicted.
(2) A person shall not deprive an unborn child of
life by termination of pregnancy except in accordance with the
conditions
laid down by an Act of Parliament for that purpose.
(3) Without prejudice to any liability for a
contravention of any other law with respect to the use of force in
such cases as
are hereinafter mentioned, a person shall not be
regarded as having been deprived of his life in contravention of
this Article
if he dies as a result of the use of force to such
extent as is reasonably justifiable in the circumstances of the
case
(a) for the defence of any person from violence or for the
defence of property;
(b) in order to effect a lawful arrest or to
prevent the escape of a person lawfully detained;
(c) for the purpose of suppressing a riot,
insurrection, mutiny or if he dies as a result of a lawful act of
war; or
(d) in order to prevent the commission by
that person of a criminal offence.
|
Protection of right to life
|
|
13. (1) A person shall not be deprived of his
personal liberty except as may be authorised by law in any of the
following cases:
(a) in execution of a sentence or order of a
court, whether established for Zambia or some other country, in
respect of a
criminal offence of which he has been convicted;
(b) in execution of an order of a court of
record punishing him for contempt of that court or of a court
inferior to it;
(c) in execution of an order of a court made
to secure the fulfillment of any obligation imposed on him by
law;
(d) for the purpose of bringing him before a
court in execution of an order of a court;
(e) upon reasonable suspicion of his having
committed, or being about to commit, a criminal offence under the
law in force
in Zambia;
(f) under an order of a court or with the
consent of his parent or guardian, for his education or welfare
during any period
ending not later than the date when he attains
the age of eighteen years;
(g) for the purpose of preventing the spread
of an infectious or contagious disease;
(h) in the case of a person who is, or is
reasonably suspected to be, of unsound mind, addicted to drugs or
alcohol or a vagrant,
for the purpose of his care or treatment or
the protection of the community;
(i) for the purpose of preventing the
unlawful entry of that person into Zambia, or for the purpose of
effecting the expulsion,
extradition or other lawful removal of
that person while he is being conveyed through Zambia in the
course of his extradition
or removal as a convicted prisoner from
one country to another; or
(j) to such extent as may be necessary in
the execution of a lawful order requiring that person to remain
within a specified
area within Zambia or prohibiting him from
being within such area, or to such extent as may be reasonably
justifiable for
the taking of proceedings against that person
relating to the making of any such order, or to such extent as
may be reasonably
justifiable for restraining that person during
any visit that he is permitted to make to any part of Zambia in
which, in
consequence of any such order, his presence would
otherwise be unlawful.
(2) Any person who is arrested or detained shall
be informed as soon as reasonably practicable, in a language that
he understands,
of the reasons for his arrest or detention.
(3) Any person who is arrested or detained
(a) for the purpose of bringing him before a court in execution
of an order of a court; or
(b) upon reasonable suspicion of his having
committed, or being about to commit, a criminal offence under the
law in force
in Zambia; and who is not released, shall be brought
without undue delay before a court; and if any person arrested or
detained
under paragraph (b) is not tried within a reasonable
time, then, without prejudice to any further proceedings that may
be
brought against him, he shall be released either
unconditionally or upon reasonable conditions, including in
particular such
conditions as are reasonably necessary to ensure
that he appears at a later date for trial or for proceedings
preliminary
to trial.
(4) Any person who is unlawfully arrested or
detained by any other person shall be entitled to compensation
therefor from that
other person.
|
Protection of right to personal liberty
|
|
14. (1) A person shall not be held in slavery or
servitude.
(2) A person shall not be required to perform
forced labour.
(3) For the purpose of this Article, the
expression "forced labour" does not include
(a) any labour required in consequence of a sentence or order of
a court;
(b) labour required of any person while he
is lawfully detained that, though not required in consequence of
a sentence or
order of a court, is reasonably necessary in the
interests of hygiene or for the maintenance of the place at which
he is
detained;
(c) any labour required of a member of a
disciplined force in pursuance of his duties as such or, in the
case of a person
who has conscientious objections to service as a
member of a naval, military or air force, any labour that that
person is
required by law to perform in place of such service;
(d) any labour required during any period
when the Republic is at war or a declaration under Article 30 or
31 is in force
or in the event of any other emergency or calamity
that threatens the life and well-being of the community, to the
extent
that the requiring of such labour is reasonably
justifiable in the circumstances of any situation arising or
existing during
that period, or as a result of that other
emergency or calamity, for the purpose of dealing with that
situation; or
(e) any labour reasonably required as part
of reasonable and normal communal or other civic obligations.
|
Protection from slavery and forced labour
|
|
15. A person shall not be subjected to torture,
or to inhuman or degrading punishment or other like treatment.
|
Protection from inhuman treatment
|
|
16. (1) Except as provided in this Article,
property of any description shall not be compulsorily taken
possession of, and interest
in or right over property of any
description shall not be compulsorily acquired, unless by or under
the authority of an Act
of Parliament which provides for payment
of adequate compensation for the property or interest or right to
be taken possession
of or acquired.
(2) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
clause (1) to the extent that it is shown that
such law provides for the taking possession or acquisition of any
property or
interest therein or right thereover
(a) in satisfaction of any tax, rate or due;
(b) by way of penalty for breach of any law,
whether under civil process or after conviction of an offence;
(c) in execution of judgments or orders of
courts;
(d) upon the attempted removal of the
property in question out of or into Zambia in contravention of
any law;
(e) as an incident of contract including a
lease, tenancy, mortgage, charge, pledge or bill of sale or of a
title deed to
land;
(f) for the purpose of its administration,
care or custody on behalf of and for the benefit of the person
entitled to the
beneficial interest therein;
(g) by way of the vesting of enemy property
or for the purpose of the administration of such property;
(h) for the purpose of
(i) the administration of the property of a deceased person, a
person of unsound mind or a person who has not attained
the age
of eighteen years, for the benefit of the persons entitled to
the beneficial interest therein;
(ii) the administration of the property of
a person adjudged bankrupt or a body corporate in liquidation,
for the benefit
of the creditors of such bankrupt or body
corporate and, subject thereto, for the benefit of other
persons entitled to
the beneficial interest in the property;
(iii) the administration of the property
of a person who has entered into a deed of arrangement for the
benefit of his
creditors; or
(iv) vesting any property subject to a
trust in persons appointed as trustees under the instrument
creating the trust
or by a court or, by order of a court, for
the purpose of giving effect to the trust;
(i) in consequence of any law relating to
the limitation of actions;
(j) in terms of any law relating to
abandoned, unoccupied unutilised or undeveloped land, as defined
in such law;
(k) in terms of any law relating to absent
or non-resident owners, as defined in such law, of any property;
(l) in terms of any law relating to trusts
or settlements;
(m) by reason of a dangerous state or
prejudicial to the health or safety of human beings, animals or
plants.
(n) as a condition in connection with the
granting of permission for the utilisation of that or other
property in any particular
manner;
(o) for the purpose of or in connection with
the prospecting for, or exploitation of, minerals belonging to
the Republic
on terms which provide for the respective interests
of the persons affected;
(p) in pursuance of a provision for the
marketing of property of that description in the common interests
of the various persons
otherwise entitled to dispose of that
property;
(q) by way of the taking of a sample for the
purposes of any law;
(r) by way of the acquisition of the shares,
or a class of shares, in a body corporate on terms agreed to by
the holders of
not less than nine-tenths in value of those shares
or that class of shares;
(s) where the property consists of an
animal, upon its being found trespassing or straying;
(t) for so long as may be necessary for the
purpose of any examination, investigation, trial or inquiry or,
in the case of
land, the carrying out thereon
(i) of work for the purpose of the conservation of natural
resources of any description; or
(ii) of agricultural development or
improvement which the owner or occupier of the land has been
required, and has without
reasonable and lawful excuse refused or
failed, to carry out;
(u) where the property consists of any
licence or permit;
(v) where the property consists of wild
animals existing in their natural habitat or the carcasses of
wild animals;
(w) where the property, is held by a body
corporate established by law for public purposes and in which no
moneys have been
invested other than moneys provided by
Parliament;
(x) where the property is any mineral,
mineral oil or natural gases or any rights accruing by virtue of
any title or licence
for the purpose of searching for or mining
any mineral, mineral oil or natural gases
(i) upon failure to comply with any provision of such law
relating to the title or licence or to the exercise of the
rights accruing or to the development or exploitation of any
mineral, mineral oil or natural gases; or
(ii) terms of any law vesting any such
property or rights in the President;
(y) for the purpose of the administration or
disposition of such property or interest or right by the
President in implementation
of a comprehensive land policy or a
policy designed to ensure that the statute law, the Common Law
and the doctrines of equity
relating to or affecting the interest
in or rights over land, or any other interests or rights enjoyed
by Chiefs and persons
claiming through or under them, shall apply
with substantial uniformity throughout Zambia;
(z) in terms of any law providing for the
conversion of titles to land from freehold to leasehold and the
imposition of any
restriction on subdivision, assignment or
sub-letting;
(aa) in terms of any law relating to
(i) the forfeiture or confiscation of the property of a person
who has left Zambia for the purpose or apparent purpose,
of
defeating the ends of justice;
(ii) the imposition of a fine on, and the
forfeiture or confiscation of the property of, a person who
admits a contravention
of any law relating to the imposition or
collection of any duty or tax or to the prohibition or control
of dealing or
transactions in gold, currencies or securities.
(3) An Act of Parliament such as is referred to
in clause (1) shall provide that in default of agreement, the
amount of compensation
shall be determined by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
|
Protection from deprivation of property
|
|
17. (1) Except with his own consent, a person
shall not be subjected to the search of his person or his property
or the entry
by others on his premises.
(2) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision
(a) that is reasonably required in the interests of defence,
public safety, public order, public morality, public health,
town
and country planning, the development and utilisation of mineral
resources, or in order to secure the development or
utilisation
of any property for a purpose beneficial to the community;
(b) that is reasonably required for the
purpose of protecting the rights or freedoms of other persons;
(c) that authorises an officer or agent of
the Government, a local government authority or a body corporate
established by
law for a public purpose to enter on the premises
of any person in order to inspect those premises or anything
thereon for
the purpose of any tax, rate or due or in order to
carry out work connected with any property that is lawfully on
those premises
and that belongs to the Government, authority or
body corporate, as the case may be; or
(d) that authorises, for the purpose of
enforcing the judgment or order of a court in any civil
proceedings, the search of
any person or property by order of a
court or entry upon any premises by such order; and except so far
as that provision
or, as the case may be, anything done under the
authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably justifiable in a
democratic
society.
|
Protection for privacy of home and other property
|
|
18. (1) If any person is charged with a criminal
offence, then, unless the charge is withdrawn, the case shall be
afforded a
fair hearing within a reasonable time by an independent
and impartial court established by law.
(2) Every person who is charged with a criminal
offence
(a) shall be presumed to be innocent until he is proved or has
pleaded guilty;
(b) shall be informed as soon as reasonably
practicable, in a language that he understands and in detail, of
the nature of
the offence charged;
(c) shall be given adequate time and
facilities for the preparation of his defence;
(d) shall unless legal aid is granted to him
in accordance with the law enacted by Parliament for such purpose
be permitted
to defend himself before the court in person, or at
his own expense, by a legal representative of his own choice;
(e) shall be afforded facilities to examine
in person or by his legal representative the witnesses called by
the prosecution
before the court, and to obtain the attendance
and carry out the examination of witnesses to testify on his
behalf before
the court on the same conditions as those applying
to witnesses called by the prosecution; and
(f) shall be permitted to have without
payment the assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand
the language used
at the trial of the charge;
and except with his own consent the trial shall
not take place in his absence unless he so conducts himself as to
render the
continuance of the proceedings in his presence
impracticable and the court has ordered him to be removed and the
trial to proceed
in his absence.
(3) When a person is tried for any criminal
offence, the accused person or any person authorised by him in
that behalf shall,
if he so requires and subject to payment of
such reasonable fee as may be prescribed by law, be given within a
reasonable time
after judgement a copy for the use of the accused
person of any record of the proceedings made by or on behalf of
the court.
(4) A person shall not be held to be guilty of a
criminal offence on account of any act or omission that did not,
at the time
it took place, constitute such an offence, and a
penalty shall not be imposed for any criminal offence that is
severer in degree
or description than the maximum penalty that
might have been imposed for that offence at the time it was
committed.
(5) A person who shows that he has been tried by
a competent court for a criminal offence and either convicted or
acquitted
shall not again be tried for that offence or for any
other criminal offence of which he could have been convicted at
the trial
for that offence, except upon the order of a superior
court in the course of appeal or review proceedings relating to
the conviction
or acquittal.
(6) A person shall not be tried for a criminal
offence if he shows that he has been pardoned for that offence.
(7) A person who is tried for a criminal offence
shall not be compelled to give evidence at the trial.
(8) A person shall not be convicted of a criminal
offence unless that offence is defined and the penalty is
prescribed in a
written law:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall
prevent a court of record from punishing any person for contempt
of itself notwithstanding
that the act or omission constituting
the contempt is not defined in a written law and the penalty
therefore is not so prescribed.
(9) Any court or other adjudicating authority
prescribed by law for determination of the existence or extent of
any civil right
or obligation shall be established by law and
shall be independent and impartial; and where proceedings for such
a determination
are instituted by any person before such a court
or other adjudicating authority, the case shall be given a fair
hearing within
a reasonable time.
(10) Except with the agreement of all the parties
thereto, all proceedings of every court and proceedings for the
determination
of the existence or extent of any civil right or
obligation before any other adjudicating authority, including the
announcement
of the decision of the court or other authority,
shall be held in public.
(11) Nothing in clause (10) shall prevent the
court or other adjudicating authority from excluding from the
proceedings persons
other than the parties thereto and their legal
representatives to such extent as the court or other authority
(a) may consider necessary or expedient in circumstances where
publicity would prejudice the interests of justice or in
interlocutory proceedings; or
(b) may be empowered by law to do in the
interest of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality, the welfare of
persons under the age of eighteen years
or the protection of the private lives of persons concerned in
the proceedings.
(12) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
(a) paragraph (a) of clause (2) to the extent that it is shown
that the law in question imposes upon any person charged with
a
criminal offence the burden of proving particular facts;
(b) paragraph (d) of clause (2) to the
extent that it is shown that the law in question prohibits legal
representation before
a subordinate court in proceedings for an
offence under Zambian customary law, being proceedings against
any person who,
under that law, is subject to that law;
(c) paragraph (e) of clause (2) to the
extent that it is shown that the law in question imposes
reasonable conditions that
must be satisfied if witnesses called
to testify on behalf of an accused person are to be paid their
expenses out of public
funds;
(d) clause (2) to the extent that it is
shown that the law provides that
(i) where the trial of any person for any offence prescribed by
or under the law has been adjourned and the accused,
having
pleaded to the charge, fails to appear at the time fixed by the
court for the resumption of his trial after the
adjournment,
the proceedings may continue notwithstanding the absence of the
accused if the court, being satisfied that,
having regard to
all the circumstances of the case, it is just and reasonable so
to do, so orders; and
(ii) the court shall set aside any
conviction or sentence pronounced in the absence of the accused
in respect of that
offence if the accused satisfies the court
without undue delay that the cause of his absence was
reasonable and that
he had a valid defence to the charge;
(e) clause (2) to the extent that it is
shown that the law provides that the trial of a body corporate
may take place in the
absence of any representative of the body
corporate upon a charge in respect of which a plea of not guilty
has been entered
by the court;
(f) clause (5) to the extent that it is
shown that the law in question authorises a court to try a member
of a disciplined
force for a criminal offence notwithstanding any
trial and conviction or acquittal of that member under the
disciplinary
law of that force, so, however, that any court so
trying such a member and convicting him shall in sentencing him
to any
punishment take into account any punishment awarded him
under that disciplinary law.
(13) In the case of any person who is held in
lawful detention, clause (1), paragraphs (d) and (e) of clause (3)
shall not apply
in relation to his trial for a criminal offence
under the law regulating the discipline of persons held in such
detention.
(14) In its application to a body corporate
clause (2) shall have effect as if words "in person or"
were omitted from
paragraph (d) and (e).
(15) In this Article "criminal offence"
means a criminal offence under the law in force in Zambia.
|
Provisions to secure protection of law
|
|
19. (1) Except with his own consent, a person
shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of
conscience, and for the
purposes of this Article the said freedom
includes freedom of thought and religion, freedom to change his
religion or belief,
and freedom, either alone or in community with
others, and both in public and in private, to manifest and
propagate his religion
or belief in worship, teaching, practice
and observance.
(2) Except with his own consent, or, if he is a
minor, the consent of his guardian, a person attending any place
of education
shall not be required to receive religious
instruction or to take part in or attend any religious ceremony or
observance if
that instruction, ceremony or observance relates to
a religion other than his own.
(3) A religious community or denomination shall
not be prevented from providing religious instruction for persons
of that community
or denomination in the course of any education
provided by that community or denomination or from establishing
and maintaining
instructions to provide social services for such
persons.
(4) A person shall not be compelled to take any
oath which is contrary to his religion or belief or to take any
oath in a manner
which is contrary to his religion or belief.
(5) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision which is reasonably required
(a) in the interests of defence, public safety, public order,
public morality or public health;
or
(b) for the purpose of protecting the rights
and freedoms of other persons, including the right to observe and
practice any
religion without the unsolicited intervention of
members of any other religion; and except so far as that
provision or, the
thing done under the authority thereof as the
case may be, is shown not to be reasonably justifiable in a
democratic society.
|
Protection of freedom of conscience
|
|
20. (1) Except with his own consent, a person
shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of
expression, that is to
say, freedom to hold opinions without
interference, freedom to receive ideas and information without
interference, freedom
to impart and communicate ideas and
information without interference, whether the communication be to
the public generally
or to any person or class of persons, and
freedom from interference with his correspondence.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, a law shall not make any provision that derogates
from freedom of the press.
(3) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision
(a) that is reasonably required in the interests of defence,
public safety, public order, public morality or public health;
or
(b) that is reasonably required for the
purpose of protecting the reputations, rights and freedoms of
other persons or the
private lives of persons concerned in legal
proceedings, preventing the disclosure of information received in
confidence,
maintaining the authority and independence of the
courts, regulating educational institutions in the interests of
persons
receiving instruction therein, or the registration of, or
regulating the technical administration or the technical
operation
of, newspapers and other publications, telephony,
telegraphy, posts, wireless broadcasting or television; or
(c) that imposes restrictions upon public
officers; and except so far as that provision or, the thing done
under the authority
thereof as the case may be, is shown not to
be reasonably justifiable in a democratic society.
|
Protection of freedom of expression
|
|
21. (1) Except with his own consent a person
shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of assembly
and association,
that is to say, his right to assemble freely and
associate with other persons and in particular to form or belong
to any political
party, trade union or other association for the
protection of his interests.
(2) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision
(a) that is reasonably required in the interests of defence,
public safety, public order, public morality or public health;
(b) that is reasonably required for the
purpose of protecting the rights or freedoms of other persons;
(c) that imposes restrictions upon public
officers; or
(d) for the registration of political
parties or trade unions in a register established by or under a
law and for imposing
reasonable conditions relating to the
procedure for entry on such a register including conditions as to
the minimum number
of persons necessary to constitute a trade
union qualified for registration; and except so far as that
provision or, the
thing done under the authority thereof as the
case may be, is shown not to be reasonably justifiable in a
democratic society.
|
Protection of freedom of assembly and
association
|
|
22. (1) Subject to the other provisions of this
Article and except in accordance with any written law, a citizen
shall not be
deprived of his freedom of movement, and for the
purposes of this Article freedom of movement means-
(a) the right to move freely throughout Zambia;
(b) the right to reside in any part of
Zambia; and
(c) the right to leave Zambia and to return
to Zambia.
(2) Any restrictions on a person's freedom of
movement that relates to his lawful detention shall not be held to
be inconsistent
with or in contravention of this Article.
(3) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision
(a) for the imposition of restrictions that are reasonably
required in the interests of defence, public safety, public
order, public morality or public health or the imposition of
restrictions on the acquisition or use by any person of land or
other property in Zambia, and except so far as that provision or,
the thing done under the authority thereof as the case
may be, is
shown not to be reasonably justifiable in a democratic society;
(b) for the imposition of restrictions on
the freedom of movement of any person who is not a citizen of
Zambia;
(c) for the imposition of restrictions upon
the movement or residence within Zambia of public officers; or
(d) for the removal of a person from Zambia
to be tried outside Zambia for a criminal offence or to undergo
imprisonment in
some other country in execution of the sentence
of a court in respect of a criminal offence under the law in
force in Zambia
of which he has been convicted.
|
Protection of freedom of movement
|
|
23. (1) Subject to clauses (4), (5) and (7), a
law shall not make any provision that isdiscriminatory either of
itself or in
its effect.
(2) Subject to clauses (6), (7) and (8), a person
shall not be treated in a discriminatory manner by any person
acting by virtue
of any written law or in the performance of the
functions of any public office or any public authority.
(3) In this Article the expression
"discriminatory" means affording different treatment to
different persons attributable,
wholly or mainly to their
respective descriptions by race, tribe, sex, place of origin,
marital status, political opinions,
colour or creed whereby
persons of one such description are subjected to disabilities or
restrictions to which persons of another
such description are not
made subject or are accorded privileges or advantages which are
not accorded to persons of another
such description.
(4) Clause (1) shall not apply to any law so far
as that law makes provision
(a) for the appropriation of the general revenues of the
Republic;
(b) with respect to persons who are not
citizens of Zambia;
(c) with respect to adoption, marriage,
divorce, burial, devolution of property on death or other matters
of personal law;
(d) for the application in the case of
members of a particular race or tribe, of customary law with
respect to any matter
to the exclusion of any law with respect to
that matter which is applicable in the case of other persons; or
(e) whereby persons of any such description
as is mentioned in clause (3) may be subjected to any disability
or restriction
or may be accorded any privilege or advantage
which, having regard to its nature and to special circumstances
pertaining
to those persons or to persons of any other such
description is reasonably justifiable in a democratic society.
(5) Nothing contained in any law shall be held to
be inconsistent with or in contravention of clause (1) to the
exent that it
is shown that it makes reasonable provision with
respect to qualifications for service as a public officer or as a
member of
a disciplined force or for the service of a local
government authority or a body corporate established directly by
any law.
(6) Clause (2) shall not apply to anything which
is expressly or by necessary implication authorised to be done by
any such
provision or law as is referred to in clause (4) or (5).
(7) Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
this Article to the extent that it is shown that
the law in question makes provision whereby persons of any such
description
as is mentioned in clause (3) may be subjected to any
restriction on the rights and freedoms guaranteed by Articles 17,
19,
20, 21 and 22, being such a restriction as is authorised by
clause (2) of Article 17, clause (5) of Article 19, clause (2) of
Article 20, clause (2) of Article 21 or clause (3) of Article 22,
as the case may be.
(8) Nothing in clause (2) shall affect any
discretion relating to the institution, conduct or discontinuance
of civil or criminal
proceedings in any court that is vested in
any person by or under this Constitution or any other law.
|
Protection from discrimination on the ground of
race, etc.
|
|
24. (1) A young person shall not be employed and
shall in no case be caused or permitted to engage in any
occupation or employment
which would prejudice his health or
education or interfere with his physical, mental or moral
development: Provided that an
Act of Parliament may provide for
the employment of a young person for a wage under certain
conditions.
(2) All young persons shall be protected against
physical or mental ill-treatment, all forms of
neglect, cruelty or exploitation.
(3) A young person shall not be the subject of
traffic in any form.
(4) In this Article "young person"
means any person under the age of fifteen years.
|
Protection of young persons from exploitation |
|
25. Nothing contained in or done under the
authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
Articles 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 or 24 to
the extent that it is shown that the law in question authorises
the taking,
during any period when the Republic is at war or when
a declaration under Article 30 is in force, of measures for the
purpose
of dealing with any situation existing or arising during
that period; and nothing done by any person under the authority of
any such law shall be held to be in contravention of any of the
said provisions if it is shown that the measures taken were,
having due regard to the circumstances prevailing at the time,
reasonably required for the purpose of dealing with the situation
in question.
|
Derogation from fundamental rights and detention
|
|
26. (1) Where a person's freedom of movement is
restricted, or he is detained, under the authority of any such law
as is referred
to in Article 22 or 25, as the case may be, the
following provisions shall apply-
(a) he shall, as soon as reasonably practicable and in any case
not more than fourteen days after the commencement of his
detention or restriction, be furnished with a statement in
writing in a language that he understands specifying in detail
the grounds upon which he is restricted or detained;
(b) not more than fourteen days after the
commencement of his restriction or detention a notification shall
be published in
the Gazette stating that be has been restricted
or detained and giving particulars of the place of detention and
the provision
of law under which his restriction or detention is
authorised;
(c) if he so requests at any time during the
period of such restriction or detention not earlier than three
months after the
commencement thereof or after he last made such
a request during that period, as the case may be, his case shall
be reviewed
by an independent and impartial tribunal established
by law and presided over by a person, appointed by the Chief
Justice
who is or is qualified to be a judge of the High Court;
(d) he shall be afforded reasonable
facilities to consult a legal representative of his own choice
who shall be permitted
to make representations to the authority
by which the restriction or detention was ordered or to any
tribunal established
for the review of his case; and
(e) at the hearing of his case by such
tribunal he shall be permitted to appear in person or by a legal
representive of his
own choice.
(2) On any review by a tribunal under this
Article the tribunal shall advise the authority by which it was
ordered on the necessity
or expediency of continuing his
restriction or detention and that authority shall be obliged to
act in accordance with any
such advice.
(3) The President may at any time refer to the
tribunal the case of any person who has been or is being
restricted or detained
pursuant to any restriction or detention
order.
(4) Nothing contained in paragraph (d) or (e) of
clause (1) shall be construed as entitling a person to legal
representation
at the public expense.
(5) Parliament may make or provide for the making
of rules to regulate the proceedings of any such tribunal
including, but without
derogating from the generality of the
foregoing, rules as to evidence and the admissibility thereof, the
receipt of evidence
including written reports in the absence of
the restricted or detained person and his legal representative,
and the exclusion
of the public from the whole or any portion of
the proceedings.
(6) Clauses (11) and (12) of Article 18 shall be
read and construed subject to the provisions of this Article.
|
Provisions relating to restriction and detention
|
|
27. (1) Whenever-
(a) a request is made in accordance with clause (2) for a report
on a bill or statutory instrument; or
(b) the Chief Justice considers it necessary
for the purpose of determining claims for legal aid in respect of
proceedings
under Article 30 or 31; the Chief Justice shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of two persons selected by
him from
amongst persons who hold or have held the office of a
judge of the Supreme Court or the High Court.
(2) A request for a report on a bill or a
statutory instrument may be made by not less than thirty members
of the National Assembly
by notice in writing delivered
(a) in the case of a bill, to the Speaker within three days after
the final reading of the bill in the Assembly;
(b) in the case of a statutory instrument,
to the authority having power to make the instrument within
fourteen days of the
publication of the instrument in the
Gazette.
(3) Where a tribunal is appointed under this
Article for the purpose of reporting on a bill or a statutory
instrument, the tribunal
shall, within the prescribed period,
submit a report to the President and to the Speaker of the
National Assembly stating
(a) in the case of a bill, whether or not in the opinion of the
tribunal any, and if so which, provisions of the bill are
inconsistent with this Constitution;
(b) in the case of a statutory instrument,
whether or not in the opinion of the tribunal any, and if so
which, provisions
of the instrument are inconsistent with this
Constitution;
and, if the tribunal reports that any
provision would be or is inconsistent with this Constitution, the
grounds upon which
the tribunal has reached that conclusion:
Provided that if the tribunal considers that the
request for a report on a bill or statutory instrument is merely
frivolous
or vexatious, it may so report to the President without
entering further upon the question whether the bill or statutory
instrument
would be or is inconsistent with this Constitution.
(4) In determining any claim for legal aid as
referred to in clause (2), the tribunal may grant to any person
who satisfies
it that
(a) he intends to bring or is an applicant in proceedings under
clause (1) or (4) of Article 28;
(b) he has reasonable grounds for bringing
the application; and
(c) he cannot afford to pay for the cost of
the application;
a certificate that the application is a proper
case to be determined at the public expense:
Provided that paragraph (c) shall not apply in
any case where the application relates to the validity or a
provision in respect
of which the tribunal has reported that it
would be or is inconsistent with this Constitution or where it
appears to the tribunal
that issues are or will be raised in the
application which are of general public importance.
(5) Where a certificate is granted to any person
by the tribunal in pursuance of clause (4), there shall be paid to
that person
out of the general revenues of the Republic such
amount as the tribunal, when hearing the application, may assess
as the costs
incurred by that person in connection with the
application;
and the sums required for making such payment
shall be a charge on the general revenues of the Republic.
(6) For the purposes of clause(5)
(a) the costs incurred in an application shall include the cost
of obtaining the advice of a legal representative and, if
necessary, the cost of representation by a legal representative
in any court in steps preliminary or incidental to the
application;
(b) in assessing the costs reasonably
incurred by a person in an application, regard shall be had to
costs awarded against
that person or recovered by him in those
proceedings.
(7) In this Article, "prescribed period"
means
(a) in relation to a bill, the period commencing from the
appointment of the tribunal to report upon the bill and ending
thirty days thereafter or if the Speaker, on the application of
the tribunal considers that owing to the length or complexity
of
the bill thirty days is insufficient for consideration of the
bill, ending on such later day as the Speaker may determine;
(b) in relation to a statutory instrument,
the period of forty days commencing with the day on which the
instrument is published
in the Gazette.
(8) Nothing in clause (1), (2) or (3) shall apply
to a bill for the appropriation of the general revenues of the
Republic or
a bill containing only proposals for expressly
altering this Constitution or the Constitution of Zambia Act.
|
Reference of certain matters to special tribunal
|
|
28. (1) Subject to clause (5), if any person
alleges that any of the provisions of Articles 11 to 26 inclusive
has been, is
being or is likely to be contravened in relation to
him, then, without prejudice to any other action with respect to
the same
matter which is lawfully available, that person may apply
for redress to the High Court which shall-
(a) hear and determine any such application;
(b) determine any question arising in the
case of any person which is referred to it in pursuance of
clause(2);
and which may, make such order, issue such writs
and give such directions as it may consider appropriate for the
purpose of
enforcing, or securing the enforcement of, any of the
provisions of Articles 11 to 26 inclusive.
(2) (a) If in any proceedings in any subordinate
court any question arises as to the contravention of any of the
provisions
of Articles 11 to 26 inclusive, the person presiding in
that court may, and shall if any party to the proceedings so
requests,
refer the question to the High Court unless, in his
opinion the raising of the question is merely frivolous or
vexatious.
(b) Any person aggrieved by any
determination of the High Court under this Article may appeal
therefrom to the Supreme Court:
Provided that an appeal shall not lie from a
determination of the High Court dismissing an application on the
ground that it
is frivolous and vexatious.
(3) An application shall not be brought under
clause (1) on the grounds that the provisions of Articles 11 to 26
(inclusive)
are likely to be contravened by reason of proposals
contained in any bill which, at the date of the application, has
not become
a law.
(4) Parliament may confer upon the Supreme Court
or High Court such jurisdiction or powers in addition to those
conferred by
this Article as may appear to be necessary or
desirable for the purpose of enabling that Court more effectively
to exercise
the jurisdiction conferred upon it by this Article or
of enabling any application for redress to be more speedily
determined.
|
Enforcement of protective provisions |
|
29. (1) The President may, in consultation with
Cabinet, at any time, by Proclamation published in the Gazette
declare war.
(2) A declaration made under clause (1) shall
continue in force until the cessation of hostilities.
(3) An Act of Parliament shall provide for the
conditions and circumstances under which a declaration may be made
under clause
(1).
|
Declaration of war
|
|
30. (1) The President may, in consultation with
Cabinet, at any time, by Proclamation published in the Gazette
declare that
a State of public emergency exists.
(2) A declaration made under clause (1) of this
Article shall cease to have effect on the expiration of a period
of seven days
commencing with the day on which the declaration is
made unless, before the expiration of such period, it has been
approved
by a resolution of the National Assembly supported by a
majority of all the members thereof not counting the Speaker.
(3) In reckoning any period of seven days for the
purposes of clause (2) account shall not be taken of any time
during which
Parliament is dissolved.
(4) A declaration made under clause (1) may, at
any time before it has been approved by a resolution of the
National Assembly,
be revoked by the President by Proclamation
published in the Gazette.
(5) Subject to clause (6) a resolution of the
National Assembly under clause (2) will continue in force until
the expiration
of a period of three months commencing with the
date of its being approved or until revoked at such earlier date
of its being
so approved or until such earlier date as may be
specified in the resolution:
Provided that the National Assembly may, by
majority of all the members thereof, not counting the Speaker
extend the approval
of the declaration for periods of not more
than three months at a time.
(6) The National Assembly may, by resolution, at
any time revoke a resolution made by it under this Article.
(7) Whenever an election to the office of
President results in a change of the holder of that office, any
declaration made under
this Article and in force immediately
before the day on which the President assumes office shall cease
to have effect on the
expiration of seven days commencing with
that day.
(8) The expiration or revocation of any
declaration or resolution made under this Article shall not affect
the validity or anything
previously done in reliance on such
declaration.
|
Declaration of public emergency
|
|
31. (1) The President may at any time by
Proclamation published in the Gazette declare that a situation
exists which, if is
allowed to continue may lead to a state of
public emergency.
(2) A declaration made under clause (1) of this
Article shall cease to have effect on the expiration of a period
of seven days
commencing with the day on which the declaration is
made unless, before the expiration of such period, it has been
approved
by a resolution of the National Assembly supported by a
majority of all the members thereof not counting the Speaker.
(3) In reckoning any period of seven days for the
purposes of clause (2) account shall not be taken of any time
during which
Parliament is dissolved.
(4) A declaration made under clause (1) may, at
any time before it has been approved by a resolution of the
National Assembly,
be revoked by the President by Proclamation
published in the Gazette.
(5) Subject to clause (6) a resolution of the
National Assembly under clause (2) will continue in force until
the expiration
of a period of three months commencing with the
date of its being approved or until revoked on an earlier date of
its being
so approved or until such earlier date as may be
specified in the resolution.
(6) The National Assembly may by resolution, at
any time revoke a resolution made by it under this Article.
(7) Whenever an election to the office of
President results in a change of the holder of that office, any
declaration made under
this Article and in force immediately
before the day on which the President assumes office, shall cease
to have effect on the
expiration of seven days commencing with
that day.
(8) The expiration or revocation of any
declaration or resolution made under this Article shall not affect
the validity or anything
previously done in reliance on such
declaration.
|
Declaration relating to threatened emergency
|
|
32. (1) In this Part, unless the context
otherwise requires
"contravention", in relation to any requirement,
includes a failure to comply with that requirement and cognate
expressions shall be construed accordingly;
"court" means any court of law having
jurisdiction in Zambia, other than a court established by a
disciplinary law;
and in Articles 12 and 14 includes a court
established by a disciplinary law;
"disciplinary law" means a law
regulating the disciplined force;
"disciplined force" means-
(a) a naval, military or air force;
(b) the Zambia Police Force; or
(c) any other force established by or under an
Act of Parliament;
"legal representative" means a person
entitled to practice in Zambia as an advocate; and
"member", in relation to a disciplined
force, includes any person who, under the law regulating the
discipline of
that force is subject to that discipline.
(2) In relation to any person who is a member of
a disciplined force raised under the law of Zambia, nothing
contained in or
done under the authority of the disciplinary law
of that force shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of
any of the provisions of this Part other than
Articles 12, 14 and 15.
(3) In relation to any person who is a member of
a disciplined force raised otherwise than as aforesaid and
lawfully present
in Zambia, nothing contained in or done under the
authority of the disciplinary law of that force shall be held to
be inconsistent
with or in contravention of any of the provisions
of this Part.
|
Interpretation and savings
|
PART IV
THE EXECUTIVE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
33. (1) There shall be a President of the
Republic of Zambia who shall be the Head of State and of the
Government and the Commander-in-Chief
of the Defence Force.
(2) The executive power of the Republic of Zambia
shall vest in the President and, subject to the other provisions
of this Constitution,
shall be exercised by him either directly or
through officers subordinate to him.
|
Office of President
|
|
34. (1) The election of the President shall be
direct by universal adult suffrage and by secret ballot and shall
be conducted
in accordance with this Article and as may be
prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament.
(2) An election to the office of President shall
be held whenever the National Assembly is dissolved and otherwise
as provided
by Article 38.
(3) A person shall be qualified to be a candidate
for election as President if
(a) he is a Zambian citizen;
(b) both his parents are Zambians by birth
or descent;
(c) he has attained the age of thirty-five
years;
(d) he is a member of, or is sponsored by, a
political party;
(e) he is qualified to be elected as a
member of the National Assembly; and
(f) has been domiciled in Zambia for a
period of at least twenty years.
(4) A candidate for election as President
(hereinafter referred to as a Presidential candidate) shall
deliver his nomination
papers to the Returning Officer in such
manner, on such day, at such time and at such place as may be
prescribed by or under
an Act of Parliament.
(5) A Presidential candidate shall not be
entitled to take part in an election unless
(a) he has paid such election fee as may be prescribed by or
under an Act of Parliament on or before the date fixed by the
Electoral Commission in that behalf;
(b) he makes a statutory declaration, of his
assets and liabilities, which shall be open to public inspection
at such time
and at such place as may be prescribed by or under
an Act of Parliament; and
(c) his nomination is supported by not less
than 200 registered voters.
(6) At an election to the office of President
(a) all persons registered in Zambia as voters for the purposes
of elections to the National Assembly shall be entitled to
vote
in the election;
(b) the poll shall be taken by a secret
ballot on such day, at such time, in such places and in such a
manner as may be prescribed
by or under an Act of Parliament; and
(c) after the expiration of the time fixed
for polling, the votes cast shall be counted and the Returning
Officer shall declare
the result.
(7) Where there is only one qualified
Presidential candidate nominated for election, that candidate
shall be declared as elected
without an election taking place.
(8) The Returning Officer shall declare the
candidate who receives the highest number of the total votes cast
to have been duly
elected as President.
(9) A person elected as President under this
Article shall be sworn in and assume office immediately but not
later than twenty-four
hours from the time of declaring the
election.
(10) The person who has held office of President
shall immediately hand over the office of President to the person
elected as
President and shall complete the procedural and
administrative handing over process within fourteen days from the
date the
person elected as President is sworn in.
(11) The person who has held office as President
shall not, within the period referred to in clause (10), perform
any functions
of the office of President under this Constitution
or any other law.
|
Election of President
|
|
35. (1) Subject to clauses (2) and (4) every
President shall hold office for a period of five years.
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Constitution or any other law a person who has
twice been elected
as President shall not be eligible for
re-election to that office.
(3) The President may, at any time by writing
under his hand addressed to the Speaker of the National Assembly,
resign his office.
(4) A person assuming the office of the President
in accordance with this Constitution shall, unless
(a) he resigns his office;
(b) he ceases to hold office by virtue of
Article 36 or 37; or
(c) the National Assembly is dissolved;
continue in office until the person elected at
the next election to the office of President assumes office.
|
Tenure of office of President
|
|
36. (1) If it is resolved by a majority of all
the members of the Cabinet that the question of the physical or
mental capacity
of the President to discharge the functions of his
office ought to be investigated, and they so inform the Chief
Justice, then
the Chief Justice shall appoint a board consisting
of not less than three persons selected by him from among persons
who are
qualified as medical practitioners under the law of Zambia
or under the law of any other country in the Commonwealth, and the
board shall inquire into the matter and report to the Chief
Justice on whether or not the President is, by reason of any
infirmity of body or mind, incapable of discharging the functions
of his office.
(2) If the board reports that the President is
incapable of discharging the functions of his office, the Chief
Justice shall
certify in writing accordingly and shall table such
certificate, with the
report of the board before the National Assembly
who shall on a motion, passed by a two thirds majority
(a) ratify the decision of the board, and thereupon the President
shall cease to hold office;
or
(b) reject the decision of the board and
cause a further inquiry into whether or not the President is
incapable of discharging
the functions of his office and shall
thereafter decide on such question by a two-thirds majority vote,
which decision shall
be final.
(3) Where the Cabinet resolves that the question
of the physical and mental capacity of the President to discharge
the functions
of his office should be investigated, the President
shall, until another person assumes the office of President or the
board
appointed under clause (1) reports that the President is not
incapable of discharging the functions of his office, whichever is
the earlier, cease to perform the functions of his office and
those functions shall be performed by
(a) the Vice-President; or
(b) in the absence of the Vice-President or
if the Vice-President is unable, by reason of physical or mental
infirmity, to
discharge the functions of his office, by such
member of the Cabinet as the Cabinet shall elect:
Provided that any person performing the
functions of the office of President under this clause shall not
dissolve the National
Assembly nor, except on the advice of the
Cabinet, revoke any appointment made by the President.
A motion for the purposes of clause (1) may
be proposed at any meeting of the Cabinet.
|
Removal of President on grounds of incapacity. |
|
37. (1) If notice in writing is given to the
Speaker of the National Assembly signed by not less than one-third
of all the members
of the National Assembly of a motion alleging
that the President has committed any violation of the Constitution
or any gross
misconduct and specifying the particulars of the
allegations and proposing that a tribunal be established under
this Article
to investigate those allegations, the Speaker shall-
(a) if Parliament is then sitting or has been summoned to meet
within five days, cause the motion to be considered by the
National Assembly within seven days of the notice;
(b) if Parliament is not then sitting (and
notwithstanding that it may be prorogued) summon the National
Assembly to meet
within twenty-one days of the notice and cause
the motion to be considered at that meeting.
(2) Where a motion under this Article is proposed
for consideration by the National Assembly, the National Assembly
shall debate
the motion and if the motion is supported by the
votes of not less than two thirds of all the members of the
National Assembly,
the motion shall be passed.
(3) If the motion is declared to be passed under
clause (2)
(a) the Chief Justice shall appoint a tribunal which shall
consist of a Chairman and not less than two other members
selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who hold or have
held high judicial office;
(b) the tribunal shall investigate the
matter and shall report to the the National Assembly whether it
finds the particulars
of the allegations specified in the motion
to have been substantiated; and
(c) the President shall have the right to
appear and be represented before the tribunal during its
investigation of the allegations
against him.
(4) If the tribunal reports to the National
Assembly that the tribunal finds that the particulars of any
allegation against
the President specified in the motion have not
been substantiated, further proceedings shall not be taken under
this Article
in respect of that allegation.
(5) If the tribunal reports to the National
Assembly that the tribunal finds that the particulars of any
allegation specified
in a motion have been substantiated, the
National Assembly may, on a motion supported by the votes of not
less than three quarters
of all members of the National Assembly,
resolve that the President has been guilty of such violation of
the Constitution or,
as the case may be, such gross misconduct as
is incompatible with his continuance in office as President and,
if the National
Assembly so resolves, the President shall cease to
hold office on the third day following the passage of the
resolution.
(6) No proceedings shall be taken or continued
under this Article at any time when Parliament is dissolved.
|
Impeachment of President for violation of
Constitution
|
|
38. (1) If the office of the President becomes
vacant by reason of his death or resignation or by reason of his
ceasing to hold
office by virtue of Article 36, 37 or 88, an
election to the office of the President shall be held in
accordance with Article
34 within ninety days from the date of the
office becoming vacant.
(2) Whenever the office of the President becomes
vacant, the Vice-President or, in the absence of the
Vice-President or if the
Vice President is unable, by reason of
physical or mental infirmity, to discharge the functions of his
office, a member of
the Cabinet elected by the Cabinet shall
perform the functions of the office of the President until a
person elected as President
in accordance with Article 34 assumes
office.
(3) The Vice-President or, the member of the
Cabinet as the case may be, performing the functions of the office
of President
under clause (2) shall not dissolve the National
Assembly nor, except on the advice of the Cabinet, revoke any
appointment
made by the President.
|
Vacancy in office of President
|
|
39. (1) Whenever the President is absent from
Zambia or considers it desirable so to do by reason of illness or
for any other
cause, he may by direction in writing, authorise the
Vice-President, or where the Vice-President is absent from Zambia
or is
incapable of discharging the functions of the office of
President, any other person, to discharge such functions of the
office
of President as he may specify, and the Vice-President or
such other person may discharge those functions until his
authority
is revoked by the President.
(2) If the President is incapable by reason of
physical or mental infirmity of discharging the functions of his
office and the
infirmity is of such a nature that the President is
unable to authorise another person under this Article to perform
those
functions
(a) the Vice-President; or
(b) during any period when the
Vice-President is absent from Zambia or is himself, by reason of
physical or mental infirmity,
unable to perform the functions of
his office, such member of the Cabinet as the Cabinet shall
elect;
shall perform the functions of the office of the
President:
Provided that any person performing the functions
of the office of President under this clause shall not dissolve
the National
Assembly nor, except on the advice of the Cabinet,
revoke any appointment made by the President.
(3) Any person performing the functions of the
office of President by virtue of clause (2) shall cease to perform
those functions
if he is notified by the Speaker that the
President is about to resume those functions or if another person
is elected as,
and assumes the office of, President.
(4) For the purpose of clause (2), a certificate
of the Chief Justice that
(a) the President is incapable by reason of physical or mental
infirmity of discharging the functions of his office and
that
the infirmity is of such a nature that the President is unable to
authorise another person under this Article to perform
those
functions; or
(b) the Vice-President is by reason of
physical or mental infirmity unable to discharge the functions of
his office;
shall be of no effect until such certificate
is ratified by the National Assembly:
Provided that any such certificate as is referred
to in paragraph (a) shall cease to have effect if the Speaker
notifies any
person under clause (3) that the President is about
to resume the functions of the office of the President or if
another person
is elected as, and assumes the office of,
President.
|
Discharge of functions of President during
absence, illness etc.
|
|
40. A person assuming the office of President
shall, before entering the office, take and subscribe to such
oaths as may be
prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament.
|
Oaths of President
|
|
41. (1) The Chief Justice shall be the Returning
Officer for the purpose of elections to the office of President.
(2) Any question which may arise as to whether
(a) any provision of this Constitution or any law relating to
election of a President has been complied with; or
(b) any person has been validly elected as
President under Article 34;
shall be referred to and determined by the full
bench of the Supreme Court.
|
Returning Officer; questions relating to
elections
|
|
42. (1) The President shall receive such salary
and allowances as may be prescribed by an Act of Parliament; and
they shall
be a charge on the general revenues of the Republic.
(2) The salary and allowances of the President
shall not be altered to his disadvantage during his term of
office.
(3) A person who has held the office of President
shall receive such pension and such gratuity as may be prescribed
by an Act
of Parliament, and that pension and gratuity shall be a
charge on
the general revenues of the Republic.
|
Salary and allowances of President
|
|
43. (1) Civil proceedings shall not be instituted
or continued against the person holding the office of President or
performing
the functions of that office in respect of which relief
is claimed against him in respect of anything done or omitted to
be
done in his private capacity.
(2) A person holding the office of President or
performing the functions of that office shall not be charged with
any criminal
offence or be amenable to the criminal jurisdiction
of any court in respect of any act done or omitted to be done
during his
tenure of that office or, as the case may be, during
his performance of the functions of that office.
(3) A person who has held, but no longer holds,
the office of President shall not be charged with a criminal
offence or be amenable
to the criminal jurisdiction of any court,
in respect of any act done or omitted to be done by him in his
personal capacity
while he held office of President, unless the
National Assembly has, by resolution, determined that such
proceedings would
not be contrary to the interests of the State.
(4) Where provision is made by law limiting the
time within which proceedings of any description may be brought
against any
person, the term of any person in the office of
President shall not be taken into account in calculating any
period of time
prescribed by that law which determines whether any
such proceedings as are mentioned in clause (1) and (3) may be
brought
against the person.
|
Protection of President in respect of legal
proceedings
|
|
44. (1) As the Head of State, the President shall
perform with dignity and leadership all acts necessary or
expedient for, or
reasonably incidental to, the discharge of the
executive functions of Government subject to the overriding terms
of this Constitution
and the Laws of Zambia which he is
constitutionally obliged to protect, administer and execute.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of clause
(1), the President may preside over meetings of the Cabinet and
shall have
the power, subject to this Constitution to-
(a) dissolve the National Assembly as
provided in Article 88;
(b) accredit, receive and recognise
ambassadors, and to appoint ambassadors, plenipotentiaries,
diplomatic representatives
and consuls;
(c) pardon or reprieve offenders, either
unconditionally or subject to such conditions as he may consider
fit;
(d) negotiate and sign international
agreements and delegate the power to do so;
(e) establish and dissolve such
Government Ministries and departments subject to the approval of
the National Assembly;
(f) confer such honours as he considers
appropriate on citizens, residents and friends of Zambia in
consultation with
interested and relevant persons and
institutions; and
(g) appoint such persons as are required
by this Constitution or any other law to be appointed by him.
(3) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution dealing with assent to laws passed by Parliament and
the promulgation and
publication of such laws in the Gazette, the
President shall have power to-
(a) sign and promulgate any proclamation
which by law he is entitled to proclaim as President; and
(b) initiate, in so far as he considers
it necessary and expedient, laws for submission and consideration
by the National
Assembly.
(4) When any appointment to an office to be made
by the President is expressed by any provision of this
Constitution to be subject
to ratification by the National
Assembly-
(a) the National Assembly shall not
unreasonably refuse or delay such ratification but the question
whether the National
Assembly has so acted unreasonably shall not
be enquired into by any court;
(b) if such ratification is refused the
President may appoint another person to the office in question
and shall submit
the appointment for ratification; or
(c) if the National Assembly refuses to
ratify the second appointment it shall be invited to ratify an
appointment for
the third time but the third appointment shall
take effect irrespective of whether such ratification is refused,
or is delayed
for a period of more than fourteen days.
(5) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution and any other law, any person appointed by the
President under this
Constitution or that other law may be removed
by the President.
(6) In the exercise of any functions conferred
upon him under this Article, the President shall, unless he
otherwise obliges,
act in his own deliberate judgement and shall
not be obliged to follow the advice tendered by any other person
or authority.
(7) Nothing in this Article shall prevent
Parliament from conferring functions on persons or authorities
other than the President.
|
Functions of President
|
|
45. (1) There shall be an office of
Vice-President of the Republic.
(2) The Vice-President shall be appointed by the
President from amongst the members of the National Assembly.
(3) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution the Vice-President shall vacate that office upon the
assumption by any person
of the office of President.
(4) In addition to the powers and functions of
the Vice-President specified in this Constitution or under any
other law, the
Vice-President shall perform such functions as
shall be assigned to him
by the President.
(5) The salary and allowances of the
Vice-President shall be such as may be prescribed by an Act of
Parliament, and shall be
a charge on the general revenues of the
Republic.
|
Vice-President
|
|
46. (1) There shall be such Ministers as may be
appointed by the President.
(2) Appointment to the office of Minister shall
be made from amongst members of the National Assembly.
(3) A Minister shall be responsible, under the
directions of the President, for such business of the Government
including the
administration of any Ministry or Department of
Government as the President may assign to such Minister.
(4) The salaries and allowances of a Minister
shall be such as may be prescribed by an Act of Parliament, and
shall be a charge
on the general revenues of the Republic.
|
Minister |
|
47. (1) The President may appoint such Deputy
Ministers as he may consider necessary to assist Ministers in the
performance
of their functions and to exercise or perform on
behalf of Ministers such of the Ministers' functions as the
President may
authorise in that behalf.
(2) A Provincial Deputy Minister shall be
responsible for the administration of any province as the
President may assign to
such Provincial Deputy Minister.
(3) Appointment to the office of Provincial
Deputy Minister and Deputy Minister shall be made from amongst
members of the National
Assembly.
(4) The salaries and allowances of Provincial
Deputy Minister and Deputy Ministers shall be such as may be
prescribed by an
Act of Parliament, and shall be a charge on the
general revenues of
the Republic.
|
Provincial Deputy Minister and Deputy Minister
|
|
48. A Vice-President, Minister or Deputy Minister
shall not enter upon the duties of his office unless he has taken
and subscribed
to the oath of allegiance and such other oath for
the due execution of his office as may be prescribed by or under
an Act of
Parliament.
|
Oaths of Vice-President, Minister and Deputy
Ministers
|
|
49. (1) There shall be a Cabinet which shall
consist of the President, the Vice-President and the Ministers.
(2) There shall preside at meetings of the
Cabinet
(a) the President; or
(b) in the absence of the President, the
Vice-President.
(3) The Cabinet may act notwithstanding any
vacancy in its membership.
|
Cabinet |
|
50. The Cabinet shall formulate the policy of the
government and shall be responsible for advising the President
with respect
to the policy of the Government and with respect to
such other matters as may be referred to it by the President.
|
Functions of Cabinet
|
|
51. The Cabinet and Deputy Ministers shall be
accountable collectively to the National Assembly. |
Accountability of Cabinet and Deputy Ministers
|
|
52. All Ministers and Deputy Ministers shall
conduct themselves, during their tenure of office, in accordance
with a code of
conduct promulgated by Parliament.
|
Code of conduct
|
|
53. (1) There shall be a Secretary to the Cabinet
whose office shall be a public office and who shall, subject to
ratification
by the National Assembly, be appointed by the
President.
(2) The Secretary to the Cabinet shall
(a) be the Head of the Public Service and shall be responsible to
the President for securing the general efficiency of the
Public
Service;
(b) have charge of Cabinet Office and be
responsible, in accordance with the instructions given to him by
the President,
for arranging the business for, and keeping the
minutes of the Cabinet and for conveying decisions made in
Cabinet to the
appropriate authorities; and
(c) have such other functions as may be
prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament or as the President
may direct.
|
Secretary to the Cabinet
|
|
54. (1) There shall be an Attorney-General of the
Republic who shall, subject to ratification by the National
Assembly, be
appointed by the President and shall be-
(a) an ex-officio member of the Cabinet; and
(b) the principal legal adviser to the
Government.
(2) Without prejudice to the general functions
under clause (1), the functions of the Attorney- General shall be
to
(a) cause the drafting of, and sign, all Government Bills to be
presented to Parliament;
(b) draw and peruse agreements, contracts,
treaties, conventions and documents, by whatever name called, to
which the Government
is a party or in respect of which the
Government has an interest;
(c) represent the Government in courts or
any other legal proceedings to which Government is a party; and
(d) perform such other functions as may be
assigned to him by the President or by law.
(3) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution, an agreement, contract, treaty, convention or
document by whatever
name called, to which Government is a party
or in respect of which the Government has an interest, shall not
be concluded without
the legal advice of the Attorney-General,
except in such cases and subject to such conditions as Parliament
may by law prescribe.
(4) A person shall not be qualified to be
appointed to the office of Attorney-General unless he is qualified
for appointment
as Judge of the High Court.
(5) The office of Attorney-General shall become
vacant if the holder of the office is removed from office by the
President.
(6) The person holding the office of
Attorney-General may resign upon giving three months' notice to
the President.
(7) In the exercise of the power to give
directions to the Director of Public Prosecutions conferred by
clause (7) of Article
56, the Attorney-General shall not be
subject to the direction or control of any other person or
authority.
|
Attorney-Generals
|
|
55. (1) There shall be a Solicitor-General of the
Republic whose office shall be a public office and who shall,
subject, to
ratification by the National Assembly, be appointed by
the President.
(2) A person shall not be qualified to be
appointed to the office of Solicitor-General unless he is
qualified for appointment
as a Judge of the High Court.
(3) The office of Solicitor-General shall become
vacant if the holder of the office is removed from office by the
President.
(4) The person holding the office of
Solicitor-General may resign upon giving three months notice to
the President.
(5) Any power or duty imposed on the
Attorney-General by this Constitution or any other written law may
be exercised or performed
by the Solicitor-General
(a) whenever the Attorney-General is unable to act owing to
illness or absence; and
(b) in any case where the Attorney-General
has authorised the Solicitor-General to do so.
|
Solicitor-General
|
|
56. (1) There shall be a Director of Public
Prosecutions who shall, subject to ratification by the National
Assembly, be appointed
by the President.
(2) A person shall not be qualified to be
appointed to the office of Director of Public Prosecutions unless
he is qualified
for appointment as Judge of the High Court with
experience biased towards criminal law.
(3) The Director of Public Prosecutions shall
have power in any case which he considers it desirable so to do
(a) to institute and undertake criminal proceedings against any
person before any court, other than a court-martial, in respect
of any offence alleged to have been committed by that person;
(b) to take over and continue any such
criminal proceedings as may have been instituted or undertaken by
any other person
or authority; and
(c) to discontinue, at any stage before
judgement is delivered, any such criminal proceedings instituted
or undertaken by
himself or any other person or authority.
(4) The powers of the Director of Public
Prosecutitions under clause (3) may be exercised by him in person
or by such public
officer or class of public officers as may be
specified by him, acting, in accordance with his general or
special instructions:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall
preclude the representation of the Director of Public Prosecutions
before any court
by a legal practitioner.
(5) The powers conferred on the Director of
Public Prosecutions by paragraphs (b) and (c) of clause (3) shall
be vested in him
to the exclusion of any other person or
authority:
(6) For the purposes of this Article, any appeal
from any judgement in any criminal proceedings before any court,
or any case
stated or question of law reserved for the purposes of
any such proceedings, to any other court in Zambia shall be deemed
to
be part of those proceedings:
Provided that the power conferred on the Director
of Public Prosecutions by paragraph (c) of clause (3) shall not be
exercised
in relation to any appeal by a person convicted in any
criminal proceedings or to any case stated or question of law
reserved
at the instance of such a person.
(7) In the exercise of the powers conferred on
him by this Article, the Director of Public Prosecutions shall not
be subject
to the direction or control of any other person or
authority:
Provided that when the exercise of any such power
in any case may, in the judgement of the Director of Public
Prosecutions involve
general consideration of public policy, the
Director of Public Prosecutions shall bring the case to the
notice of the Attorney-General
and shall in the exercise of his
powers in relation to that case, act in accordance with any
directions of the Attorney-General.
|
Director of Public Prosecutions
|
|
57. Whenever the Director of Public Prosecutions
is absent from Zambia or the President considers it desirable so
to do by reason
of the illness of the Director of Public
Prosecutions or for any other cause, he may on the advice of the
Judicial Service
Commission appoint any person to discharge the
functions of the Director of Public Prosecutions until such
appointment is revoked.
|
Discharge of functions of Director of Public
Prosecutions during absence, illness, etc.
|
|
58. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Article, a person holding the office of Director of Public
Prosecutions shall vacate
his office when he attains the age of
sixty years.
(2) A person holding the office of Director of
Public Prosecutions may be removed from office only for
incompetence or inability
to perform the functions of his office
whether arising from infirmity of body or mind or misbehaviour and
shall not be so removed
except in accordance with the provisions
of this Article.
(3) If the President considers that the question
of removing a person holding the office of Director of Public
Prosecutions
from office ought to be investigated, then
(a) he shall appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a Chairman
and not less than two other members, who hold or have held
high
judicial office;
(b) the tribunal shall inquire into the
matter and report on the facts thereof to the President and
advise the President whether
the person holding the office of
Director of Public Prosecutions ought to be removed from office
under this Article for incompetence
or inability or for
misbehaviour.
(4) Where a tribunal appointed under clause (2)
advises the President that a person holding the office of Director
of Public
Prosecutions ought to be removed from office for
incompetence or inability or for misbehaviour, the President shall
remove
such person from office.
(5) If the question of removing a person holding
the office of Director of Public Prosecutions from office has been
referred
to a tribunal under this Article, the President may
suspend that person from performing the functions of his office,
and any
such suspension may at any time be revoked by the
President and shall in any case cease to have effect if the
tribunal advises
the President that the person ought not to be
removed from office.
(6) A person appointed Director of Public
Prosecutions may resign upon giving three months' notice to the
President.
|
Tenure of office of Director of Public
Prosecutions
|
|
59. The President may
(a) grant to any person convicted of any offence pardon, either
free or subject to lawful conditions;
(b) grant to any person a respite, either
indefinite or for a specified period, of the execution of any
punishment imposed
on that person for any offence;
(c) substitute a less severe form of
punishment for any punishment imposed on any person for any
offence; and
(d) remit the whole or part of any
punishment imposed on any person for any offence or any penalty
or forfeiture or confiscation
otherwise due to the Government on
account of any offence.
|
Prerogative of mercy
|
|
60. (1) There shall be an advisory committee on
the prerogative of mercy which shall consist of such persons as
may be appointed
by the President.
(2) The President may appoint different persons
to the advisory committee for the purposes of advising him in
relation to persons
convicted by courts-martial and for purposes
of advising him
in relation to persons convicted by other courts.
(3) A member of the advisory committee shall hold
office at the pleasure of the President.
(4) Where any person has been sentenced to death
for any offence the President shall cause the question of the
exercise in relation
to that person of the powers conferred by
Article 59 to be considered at a meeting of the advisory
committee.
(5) Subject to the provisions of clause (4), the
President may refer to the advisory committee any questions as to
the exercise
of the powers conferred upon him by Article 59.
(6) The President, if present, shall preside at
any meeting of the advisory committee.
(7) The President may determine the procedure of
the advisory committee.
|
Advisory committee
|
|
61. (1) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution and any other law, the power to constitute offices
for the Republic
and the power to abolish any such offices shall
vest in the President.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution and any other law, the power to appoint persons to
hold or act in offices
constituted for the Republic of Zambia, to
confirm appointments, to exercise disciplinary control over
persons holding or acting
in such offices and to remove any such
person from office shall vest in the President.
|
Offices for Republic
|
PART V
THE LEGISLATURE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996, except for Article
79)
|
62. The legislative power of the Republic of
Zambia shall vest in Parliament which shall consist of the
President and the National
Assembly.
|
Legislative power and membership of Parliament
|
|
63. (1) The National Assembly shall consist of-
(a) one hundred and fifty elected members;
(b) not more than eight nominated members;
and
(c) the Speaker of the National Assembly.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution, the election of members of the National Assembly
shall be direct,
by universal adult suffrage and by secret ballot
and shall be conducted in accordance with the provisions of this
Constitution
and as may be prescribed by or under an Act of
Parliament.
|
Composition of and election to National Assembly
|
|
64. Subject to Article 65, a person shall be
qualified to be elected as a member of the National Assembly if
(a) he is a citizen of Zambia;
(b) he has attained the age of twenty-one
years; and
(c) he is literate and conversant with the
official language of Zambia.
|
Qualifications for election to National Assembly
|
|
65. (1) A person shall not be qualified to be
elected as a member of the National Assembly if-
(a) that person is under a declaration of allegiance to some
country other than Zambia;
(b) that person is under any law in force in
Zambia, adjudged or otherwise declared to be of unsound mind;
(c) that person is under a sentence of death
imposed on him by a court in Zambia or a sentence of
imprisonment, by whatever
name called, imposed on him by such a
court or substituted by a competent authority for some other
sentence imposed on him
by such a court;
(d) that person is an undischarged bankrupt,
having been adjudged or otherwise declared bankrupt under any law
in force in
Zambia;
(e) that person's freedom of movement is
restricted, or that person is detained under the authority of the
law; or
(f) that person, within a period of five
years before his nomination for election, has served a sentence
of imprisonment for
a criminal offence.
(2) A person who holds, or is a validly nominated
candidate in an election for, the office of the President shall
not be qualified
for election as a member of the National
Assembly.
(3) A Chief shall not be qualified for election
as a member of the National Assembly.
(4) A Chief who intends to stand for elections to
the National Assembly shall abdicate his chieftaincy before
lodging his nomination.
(5) Parliament may provide that a person who
holds or is acting in any office that is specified by Parliament
and the functions
of which involve responsibility for, or in
connection with, the conduct of any election to the National
Assembly or the compilation
of any register of voters for the
purposes of such an election shall not be qualified to be elected
as a member of the National
Assembly.
(6) Parliament may provide that a person who is
convicted by any court of any offence that is prescribed by
Parliament and that
is connected with election of the members of
the National Assembly or who is reported guilty of such an offence
by the court
trying an election petition shall not be qualified to
be elected as a member of the National Assembly for such period,
not
exceeding five years following his conviction or the report of
the court, as the case may be, as may be so prescribed.
(7) A person holding or acting in any post,
office of appointment
(a) in the Zambia Defence Force as defined in the Defence Act,
the Combined Cadet Force, the Zambia National Service, or
any
other force or service established for the preservation of
security in Zambia;
(b) in the Zambia Police Force, the Zambia
Police Reserve, the Zambia Security Intelligence Service, the
Anti-Corruption Commission,
the Drug Enforcement Commission, the
Zambia Prison Service or in any other force or service
established for the preservation
of security in Zambia;
(c) in the Public Service including an
office to which Article 61 applies;
(d) in the Teaching Service;
(e) in any statutory body or any company or
institution in which the Government has any interest; or
(f) prescribed in that behalf or under an
Act of Parliament;
shall not be qualified for election as a member
of the National Assembly.
(8) In this Article, the reference to a sentence
of imprisonment shall be construed as not including a sentence of
imprisonment
the execution of which is suspended or a sentence of
imprisonment in default of payment of a fine.
|
Disqualifications for election to National
Assembly
|
|
66. (1) Nominations for election to the National
Assembly shall be delivered to the Returning Officer appointed by
the Electoral
Commission on such day and at such time and at such
place as may be prescribed by the Electoral Commission.
(2) Any nomination for election to the National
Assembly shall not be valid unless
(a) the candidate has paid the election fees prescribed by or
under an Act of Parliament;
and
(b) the nomination is supported by not less
than nine persons registered as voters in the constituency in
which the candidate
is standing for the purpose of elections to
the National Assembly.
|
Nomination for election to National Assembly
|
|
67. (1) When a vacancy occurs in the seat of a
member of the National Assembly as a result of the death or
resignation of the
member or by virtue of Article 71, a
by-election shall be held within ninety days after the occurrence
of the vacancy.
(2) Parliament may by an Act of Parliament
prescribe the manner in which a by-election shall be held.
|
By-election for National Assembly
|
|
68. (1) The President may, at any time after a
general election to the National Assembly and before the National
Assembly is
next dissolved, appoint such number of persons as he
considers necessary to enhance the representation in the National
Assembly
as regards special interests or skills, to be nominated
members of the National Assembly, so, however, that there are not
more
than eight such members at any one time.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Article, a
person may be appointed as a nominated member if he is qualified
under Article
64 for election as an elected member and is not
disqualified under Article 65 for election as an elected member.
(3) A person may not be appointed as a nominated
member if he was candidate for election in the last preceding
general election
or in any subsequent by-election.
|
Nominated members
|
|
69. (1) There shall be a Speaker of the National
Assembly who shall be elected by the members of the Assembly from
among persons
who are qualified to be elected as members of the
Assembly but are not members of the Assembly.
(2) The Speaker shall vacate his office
(a) if any circumstances arise that, if he were not Speaker,
would disqualify him for election as such;
(b) when the National Assembly first sits
after any dissolution of the National Assembly; or
(c) if the National Assembly resolves, upon
a motion supported by the votes of not less than two-thirds of
all the members
thereof, that he shall be removed from office.
(3) No business shall be transacted in the
National Assembly, other than an election to the office of
Speaker, at any time when
the office of Speaker is vacant.
|
Speaker |
|
70. (1) There shall be a Deputy Speaker of the
National Assembly who shall be elected by the members of the
Assembly from among
the members of the Assembly.
(2) The members of the National Assembly shall
elect a person to the office of Deputy Speaker when the Assembly
first sits after
any dissolution of the National Assembly and, if
the office becomes vacant otherwise than by reason of the
dissolution of the
National Assembly, at the first sitting of the
Assembly after the office becomes vacant.
(3) The Deputy Speaker shall vacate his office
(a) if he ceases to be a member of the National Assembly;
(b) if he assumes the office of President or
becomes the Vice-President, a Minister, a Deputy Minister or
holds or acts in
any office prescribed in that behalf by or under
an Act of Parliament; or
(c) if the National Assembly resolves that
he should be removed from office.
|
Deputy Speaker
|
|
71. (1) Every member of the National Assembly,
with the exception of the Speaker, shall vacate his seat in the
Assembly upon
a dissolution of the National Assembly.
(2) A member of the National Assembly shall
vacate his seat in the Assembly
(a) if he ceases to be a citizen of Zambia;
(b) if he acts contrary to the code of
conduct prescribed by an Act of Parliament;
(c) in the case of an elected member, if he
becomes a member of a political party other than the party of
which he was an
authorised candidate when he was elected to the
National Assembly or, if having been an independent candidate, he
joins a
political party or having been a member of a political
party, he becomes an independent;
(d) if he assumes the office of President;
(e) if he is sentenced by a court in Zambia
to death or to imprisonment, by whatever name called, for a term
exceeding six
months;
(f) if any circumstances arise that, if he
were not a member of the Assembly, would cause him to be
disqualified for election
as such under Article 65;
(g) if, under the authority of any such law
as is referred to in Article 22 or 25
(i) his freedom of movement has been restricted or he has been
detained for a continuous
period exceeding six months;
(ii) his freedom of movement has been
restricted and he has immediately thereafter been
detained and the total period of
restriction and detention together exceeds six months; or
(iii) he has been detained and immediately
thereafter his freedom of movement has been restricted and the
total period
of detention and restriction together exceeds six
months.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in clause
(2), where any member of the National Assembly has been sentenced
to death
or imprisonment, adjudged or declared to be of unsound
mind, adjudged or declared bankrupt or convicted or reported
guilty
of any offence prescribed under clause (4) of Article 65
appeals against the decision or applied for a free pardon in
accordance
with any law, the decision shall not have any effect
for the purpose of this Article until the final determination of
such
appeal or application:
Provided that
(i) such member shall not, pending such final determination,
exercise his functions or receive any remuneration as a
member
of the National Assembly; and
(ii) if, on the final determination the
member's appeal or application, his conviction is set aside, or
he is granted
a free pardon, or is declared not to be of
unsound mind or bankrupt or guilty of an offence prescribed
under clause (4)
of Article 65, he shall be entitled to resume
his functions as a member of the National Assembly unless he
has previously
resigned, and to receive remuneration as a
member for the period during which he did not exercise his
functions by reason
of the provisions of paragraph (i) of this
proviso.
|
Tenure of office of members of National Assembly
|
|
72. (1) The High Court shall have power to hear
and determine any question whether-
(a) any person has been validly elected or
nominated as a member of the National Assembly or the seat of any
member has become
vacant;
(b) any person has been validly elected as
Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly or, having
been so elected,
has vacated the office of Speaker or Deputy
Speaker.
(2) An appeal from the determination of the High
Court under this Article shall lie to the Supreme Court:
Provided that an appeal shall lie to the Supreme
Court from any determination of the High Court on any question of
law including
the interpretation of this Constitution.
|
Determination of questions as to membership of
National Assembly
|
|
73. There shall be a Clerk of the National
Assembly and such other offices in the department of the Clerk of
the National Assembly
as may be prescribed by an Act of
Parliament.
|
Clerk and Staff of National Assembly
|
|
74. The President may, at any time, terminate the
appointment of any nominated member appointed under Article 68 and
appoint
any other person in that member's stead.
|
Removal of nominated member by President
|
|
75. (1) Every citizen of Zambia who has attained
the age of eighteen years shall, unless he is disqualified by
Parliament from
registration as a voter for the purposes of
elections to the National Assembly, be entitled to be registered
as such a voter
under a law in that behalf, and no other person
may be so registered.
(2) Every person who is registered in any
constituency as a voter for the purposes of elections to the
National Assembly shall,
unless he is disqualified by Parliament
from voting in such elections on the grounds of his having been
convicted of an offence
in connection with elections or, on the
grounds of his having been reported guilty of such an offence by
the court trying an
election petition or, on the grounds of his
being in lawful custody at the date of the election, be entitled
so to vote in
that constituency in accordance with the provisions
made by or under an Act of Parliament, and no other person may so
vote.
|
The francise
|
|
76. (1) There is hereby established an autonomous
Electoral Commission to supervise the registration of voters, to
conduct Presidential
and Parliamentary elections and to review the
boundaries of the constituencies into which Zambia is divided for
the purposes
of elections to the National Assembly.
(2) An Act of Parliament shall provide for the
composition and operations of the Electoral Commission appointed
by the President
under this Article.
|
Electoral Commission
|
|
77. (1) Zambia shall be divided into
constituencies, for purposes of elections to the National Assembly
so that the number of
such constituencies, the boundaries of which
shall be such as the Electoral Commission prescribes, shall be
equal to the number
of seats of elected members in the National
Assembly.
(2) In delimiting the constituencies, the
Commission shall have regard to the availability of means of
communication and the
geographical features of the area to be
divided into constituencies:
Provided that the constituencies shall be so
delimited that there shall be at least ten constituencies in each
administrative
Province.
(3) Each constituency shall return one member
only to the National Assembly.
(4) The boundaries of each constituency shall be
such that the number of inhabitants thereof is as nearly equal to
the population
quota as is reasonably practicable:
Provided that the number of inhabitants of a
constituency may be greater or less than the population quota in
order to take
account of means of communication, geographical
features and the difference between urban and rural areas in
respect of density
of population and to take account of the
proviso to clause (2).
(5) The Electoral Commission shall, where it is
reviewing the boundaries of the constituencies, review the
boundaries and may,
in accordance with the provisions of this
Article, alter the constituencies to such extent as it considers
desirable:
Provided that the Commission shall, where a
census of the population has been held and the Commission
considers that the changes
in the distribution of population
reported in the census do not justify an alteration in the
boundaries, it shall so report
to the President without entering
upon a review of the boundaries of the constituencies.
(6) any alteration of the constituencies shall
come into effect upon the next dissolution of Parliament.
(7) In this Article, "the population quota"
means the number obtained by dividing the number of inhabintants
of Zambia
by the number of constituencies into which Zambia is to
be divided under this Article.
(8) For the purposes of this Article, the number
of inhabitants of Zambia shall be ascertained by reference to the
latest census
of the population held in pursuance of any law.
(9) During any period when the Presidential and
Parliamentary elections are being held, the Electoral Commission
shall be responsible
for the registration of voters and the
conduct of elections in every constituency.
|
Constituencies and elections
|
|
78. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, the legislative power of Parliament shall be
exercised by Bills passed
by the National Assembly and assented to
by the President.
(2) A Bill (other than such a Bill as is
mentioned in clause 8 of Article 27) shall not be presented to the
President until
after the expiration of three days from the third
reading of the Bill by the National Assembly, and where a Bill is
referred
to a tribunal in accordance with Article 27, that Bill
shall not be presented to the President for assent until the
tribunal
has reported on the Bill or the time for making a report
has expired, whichever is the earlier.
(3) Where a Bill is presented to the President
for assent, he shall either assent or withhold his assent.
(4) Subject to clause (5), where the President
withholds his assent to a Bill, the President may return the Bill
to the National
Assembly with a message requesting that the
National Assembly reconsiders the Bill or any specified provision
thereof and,
in particular, any such amendments as he may
recommend in his message, and when a Bill is so returned, the
National Assembly
shall reconsider the Bill accordingly, and if
the Bill is passed by the National Assembly on a vote of not less
than two thirds
of all the members of the National Assembly, with
or without amendment, and presented to the President for assent,
the President
shall assent to the Bill within twenty-one days of
its presentation, unless he sooner dissolves Parliament.
(5) Notwithstanding clause (4), where the
President withholds his assent to a Bill, the Bill shall not again
be presented for
assent.
(6) Where a Bill that has been duly passed is
assented to in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution
it shall become
law and the President shall thereupon cause it to
be published in the Gazette as a law.
|
Exercise of legislative power of Parliament
|
|
79. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Article, Parliament may alter this Constitution or the
Constitution of Zambia Act.
(2) Subject to clause (3) a bill for the
alteration of this Constitution or the Constitution of Zambia Act
shall not be passed
unless
(a) not less than thirty days before the first reading of the
bill in the National Assembly the text of the bill is published
in the Gazette; and
(b) the bill is supported on second and
third readings by the votes of not less than two thirds of all
members of the Assembly.
(3) A bill for the alteration of Part III of this
Constitution or of this Article shall not be passed unless before
the first
reading of the bill in the National Assembly it has been
put to a National referendum with or without amendment by not less
than fifty per cent of persons entitled to be registered as voters
for the purposes of Presidential and parliamentary elections.
(4) Any referendum conducted for the purposes of
clause (3) shall be so conducted and supervised in such manner as
may be prescribed
by or under an Act of Parliament.
(5) In this Article
(a) references to this Constitution or the Constitution of Zambia
Act, include reference to any law that amends or replaces
any of
the provisions of this Constitution or that Act; and
(b) references to the alteration of this
Constitution or the Constitution of Zambia Act or of any Part or
Article include
references to the amendment, modification or
re-enactment with or without amendment or modification, of any
provision for
the time being contained in this Constitution, that
Act, Part or Article, the suspension or repeal of any such
provision
and the making of different provision in lieu of such
provision, and the addition of new provisions, to this
Constitution,
that Act, Part or Article.
(6) Nothing in this Article shall be so construed
as to require the publication of any amendment to any such bill as
is referred
to in the clause (2) proposed to be moved in the
National Assembly.
(7) A law made by Parliament shall not come into
operation until it has been published in the Gazette, but
Parliament may postpone
the coming into operation of any such law
and may make laws with retrospective effect.
(8) All laws made by Parliament shall be styled
"Acts" and the words of enactment shall be "Enacted
by the Parliament
of Zambia."
|
Alteration of Constitution
|
|
80. (1) Nothing in Article 62 shall prevent
Parliament from conferring on any person or authority power to
make statutory instruments.
(2) Every statutory instrument shall be published
in the Gazette not later than twenty-eight days after it is made
or, in the
case of a statutory instrument which will not have the
force of law unless it is approved by some person or authority
other
than the person or authority by which it was made, not later
than twenty-eight days after it is so approved, and if it is not
so published it shall be void from the date on which it was made.
(3) Where a tribunal appointed under Article 27
reports to the President that any provision of a statutory
instrument is inconsistent
with any provision of this
Constitution, the President may, by order annul that statutory
instrument and it shall thereupon
be void from the date on which
it was made.
|
Statutory Instruments
|
|
81. Except upon the recommendation of the
President signified by the Vice-President or a Minister, the
National Assembly shall
not
(a) proceed upon any Bill (including an amendment to a Bill)
that, in the opinion of the person presiding, makes provision
for
any of the following purposes:
(i) for the imposition of taxation or the
alteration of taxation otherwise than by reduction;
(ii) for the imposition of any charge upon
the general revenues of the Republic or the alteration of any
such charge otherwise
than by reduction;
(iii) for the payment, issue or withdrawal
from the general revenues of the Republic of any moneys not
charged thereon
or any increase in the amount of such payment,
issue or withdrawal; or
(iv) for the composition or remission of
any debt due to the Government; or
(b) proceed upon any motion (including any
amendment to a motion) the effect of which, in the opinion of the
person presiding,
would be to make provision for any of those
purposes.
|
Restrictions with regard to certain financial
matters
|
|
82. (1) The President may, at any time, attend
and address the National Assembly.
(2) The President may send messages to the
National Assembly and any such message shall be read, at the first
convenient sitting
of the National Assembly after it is received,
by the Vice-President or by a Minister designated by the
President.
|
President may address National Assembly
|
|
83. There shall preside at any sitting of the
National Assembly
(a) the Speaker of the National Assembly;
(b) in the absence of the Speaker, the Deputy
Speaker; or
(c) in the absence of the speaker and of the
Deputy Speaker, such member of the Assembly
as the Assembly may elect for that purpose.
|
President at National Assembly
|
|
84. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this
Constitution, all questions at any sitting of the National
Assembly shall be determined
by a majority of votes of the members
present and voting other than the Speaker or the person acting as
Speaker as the case
may be.
(2) The Speaker or the person acting as such
shall not vote in the first instance, but shall have and exercise
a casting vote
if there is an equality of votes.
(3) The National Assembly shall have power to act
notwithstanding any vacancy in the membership thereof, and any
proceedings
in the National Assembly shall be valid
notwithstanding that it is discovered subsequently that some
person who was not entitled
to do so, voted or otherwise took part
in the proceedings.
(4) The quorum for a meeting of the National
Assembly shall be one third of the total number of members of the
National Assembly
and if at any time during a meeting of the
National Assembly objection is taken by any member present that
there is no quorum,
it shall be the duty of the Speaker or the
person acting as such, either to adjourn the National Assembly or,
as he may think
fit, to suspend the meeting until there is a
quorum.
|
Voting and quorum
|
|
85. Any person who sits or votes in the National
Assembly knowing or having reasonable grounds for knowing that he
is not entitled
to do so, shall be liable to a penalty not
exceeding one thousand penalty units or such other sum as may be
prescribed by Parliament
for each day on which he so sits or
votes, which penalty shall be recoverable by action in the High
Court at the suit of the
Attorney-General |
Unqualified person, sitting or voting
|
|
86. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, the National Assembly may determine its own
procedure.
(2) The National Assembly may act notwithstanding
any vacancy in its membership (including any vacancy not filled
when the National
Assembly first meets after any dissolution of
Parliament) and the presence or participation of any person not
entitled to be
present or to participate in the proceedings of the
National Assembly shall not invalidate those proceedings.
(3) In the selection of members of committees,
the National Assembly shall seek to ensure that there shall be
equitable representation
of the political parties or groups that
are represented in the National Assembly as well as of the members
not belonging to
any such parties or groups.
|
Procedure in National Assembly
|
|
87. (1) The National Assembly and its members
shall have such privileges, powers and immunities as may be
prescribed by an Act
of Parliament.
(2) Notwithstanding subclause (1) the law and
custom of the Parliament of England shall apply to the National
Assembly with
such modifications as may be prescribed by or under
an Act of Parliament.
|
Privileges and immunities of National Assembly
|
|
88. (1) Subject to the provisions of clause (4)
each session of Parliament shall be held at such place within
Zambia and shall
commence at such time as the President may
appoint.
(2) There shall be a session of Parliament at
least once every year so that a period of twelve months shall not
intervene between
the last sitting of the National Assembly in one
session and the commencement of the next session.
(3) The President may at any time summon a
meeting of the National Assembly.
(4) Subject to the provisions of clause (1) of
Article 37, the sittings of the National Assembly in any session
of Parliament
after the commencement of that session shall be held
at such times and on such days as the National Assembly shall
appoint.
(5) The President may at any time prorogue
Parliament.
(6) Subject to clause (9) the National Assembly
(a) shall, unless sooner dissolved, continue for five years from
the date of its first sitting after the commencement of
this
Constitution or after any dissolution and shall then stand
dissolved;
(b) may, by a two thirds majority of the
numbers thereof, dissolve itself; or
(c) may be dissolved by the President at any
time.
(7) Whenever the National Assembly is dissolved
under this Article, there shall be Presidential Elections and
elections to the
National Assembly and the first session of the
new Parliament shall commence within three months from the date of
the dissolution.
(8) At any time when the Republic of Zambia is at
war, Parliament may from time to time extend the period of five
years specified
in clause (6) for not more than twelve months at a
time:
Provided that the life of the National Assembly
shall not be extended under this clause for more than five years.
(9) If, after a dissolution of Parliament and
before the holding of the general elections, the President
considers that, owing
to the existence of a state of war or of a
state of emergency in Zambia or any part thereof, it is necessary
to recall Parliament,
the President may summon the Parliament that
has been dissolved to meet and that Parliament shall be deemed to
be the Parliament
for the time being, but the general election of
members of the National Assembly shall proceed and the Parliament
that has
been recalled shall, if not sooner dissolved again, stand
dissolved on the day appointed for the nomination of candidates in
that general election.
|
Dissolution of Parliament and related matters
|
|
89. The Speaker of the National Assembly, before
assuming the duties of his office, and every member of the
National Assembly
before taking his seat therein, shall take and
subscribe before the National Assembly to the oath of allegiance.
|
Oaths to be taken by Speaker and members
|
|
90. (1) There shall be an Investigator-General of
the Republic who shall be appointed by the President in
consultation with
the Judicial Service Commission and shall be the
Chairman of the Commission for Investigations.
(2) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as Investigator-General
(a) unless he is qualified to be appointed a judge of the High
Court; or
(b) if he holds the office of the President,
Vice-President, Minister or Deputy Minister, is a member of the
National Assembly
or is a public officer.
(3) Subject to the provisions of this section, a
person appointed Investigator-General shall vacate his office on
attaining
the age of sixty-five years:
Provided that the President may permit a person
who has attained that age to continue in office for such period as
may be necessary
to complete and submit any report on, or do any
other thing in relation to, any investigation that was commenced
by him before
he attained that age.
(4) A person appointed as Investigator-General
shall forthwith vacate any office prescribed by an Act of
Parliament.
(5) A person appointed as Investigator-General
may be removed from office for incompetence or inability to
perform the functions
of his office (whether arising from
infirmity of body or mind or from any other cause) or for
misbehaviour, but shall not be
so removed except in accordance
with the provisions of this Article.
(6) If the National Assembly by resolution
supported by votes of not less than two-thirds of all the members
of that House,
resolves that the question of removing the
Investigator-General ought to be investigated, the Speaker of the
National Assembly
shall send a copy to the Chief Justice who shall
appoint a tribunal consisting of a Chairman and two other persons
to inquire
into the matter.
(7) The Chairman and one other member of the
tribunal shall be persons who hold or have held high judicial
office.
(8) The tribunal shall inquire into the matter
and report thereon to the President.
(9) Where such a tribunal advises the President
that the Investigator-General ought to be removed from office for
incompetence
or inability or for misbehaviour, the President shall
remove the Investigator-General from office.
(10) If the question of removing the
Investigator-General from office has been referred to a tribunal
under this Article, the
President may suspend him from performing
the functions of his office, and any such suspension may at any
time be revoked by
the President and shall in any case cease to
have effect if the tribunal shall advise the President that the
Investigator-General
ought not to be removed.
(11) If there is a vacancy in the office of the
Investigator-General, or if the Investigator-General is
temporarily absent from
Zambia or otherwise unable to exercise the
functions of his office, the President may appoint a person
qualified to be a Judge
of the High Court to exercise the
functions of the office of the Investigator-General under this
Article.
(12) A person appointed to the office of
Investigator-General may resign upon giving three months' notice
to the President.
(13) The functions, powers and procedures of the
Investigator-General shall be as provided by an Act of Parliament.
|
The Investigator-General
|
PART VI
THE JUDICATURE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
91. (1) The Judicature of the Republic shall
consist of:
(a) the Supreme Court of Zambia;
(b) the High Court for Zambia;
(c) the Industrial Relations Court;
(d) the Subordinate Courts;
(e) the Local Courts; and
(f) such lower Courts as may be prescribed
by an Act of Parliament.
(2) The Judges, members, magistrates and
justices, as the case may be, of the courts mentioned in clause
(1) shall be independent,
impartial and subject only to this
Constitution and the law and shall conduct themselves in
accordance with a code of conduct
promulgated by Parliament.
(3) The Judicature shall be autonomous and shall
be administered in accordance with the provisions of an Act of
Parliament.
|
Courts |
|
92. (1) There shall be a Supreme Court of Zambia
which shall be the final court of appeal for the Republic and
shall have such
jurisdiction and powers as may be conferred on it
by this Constitution or any other law.
(2) The judges of the Supreme Court shall be
(a) the Chief Justice;
(b) the Deputy Chief Justice;
(c) seven Supreme Court judges or such
greater number as may be prescribed by an Act of Parliament.
(3) The office of Chief Justice, Deputy Chief
Justice or of Supreme Court Judge shall not be abolished while
there is a substantive
holder thereof.
(4) The Supreme Court shall be superior court of
record, and, except as otherwise provided by Parliament, shall
have all the
powers of such a court.
(5) When the Supreme Court is determining any
matter, other than an interlocutory matter, it shall be composed
of an uneven
number of judges not being less than three except as
provided for under Article 41.
(6) The Chief Justice may make rules with respect
to the practice and procedure of the Supreme court in relation to
jurisdiction
and powers of the Supreme Court.
|
Supreme Court
|
|
93. (1) The Chief Justice and the Deputy Chief
Justice shall, subject to ratification by the National Assembly,
be appointed
by the President.
(2) The judges of the Supreme Court shall,
subject to ratification by the National Assembly, be appointed by
the President.
(3) If the office of Chief Justice is vacant or
if the Chief Justice is on leave or is for any reason unable to
perform the
functions of that office, then, until a person has
been appointed to, and has assumed the functions of, that office,
or until
the person holding that office has resumed those
functions, as the case may be, the President may appoint the
Deputy Chief
Justice or a Supreme Court judge to perform such
functions.
(4) Without prejudice to the generality of clause
(5), if the office of Deputy Chief Justice is vacant or the Deputy
Chief Justice
is on leave or is for any other reason unable to
perform the functions of his office, the President may appoint a
Judge of
the Supreme Court to act as Deputy Chief Justice.
(5) If the office of a Supreme Court judge is
vacant, or if any reason a Supreme Court judge is appointed to act
as Chief Justice
or Deputy Chief Justice, or if any Supreme Court
judge is on leave or is for any reason unable to perform the
functions of
that office, the President may appoint a person
qualified for appointment as a judge of the Supreme Court to act
as a Supreme
Court Judge.
(6) A person may act as Chief Justice, Deputy
Chief Justice or Supreme Court judge notwithstanding that he has
attained the
age prescribed by Article 98.
(7) A puisne judge appointed to act as Deputy
Chief Justice or Supreme Court judge, as the case may be, pursuant
to clause (4)
or (5), shall continue to be a judge of the High
Court and may continue to perform the functions of the office of
Puisne judge.
|
Appointment of judges of Supreme Court
|
|
94. (1) There shall be a High Court for the
Republic which shall have, except as to the proceedings in which
the Industrial
Relations Court has exclusive jurisdiction under
the Industrial and Labour Relations Act, unlimited and original
jurisdiction
to hear and determine any civil or criminal
proceedings under any law and such jurisdiction and powers as may
be conferred
on it by this Constitution or any other law.
(2) The High Court shall be divided into such
divisions as may be determined by an Act of Parliament.
(3) The Chief Justice shall be an ex-officio
judge of the High Court.
(4) The other judges of the High Court shall be
such number of puisne judges as may be prescribed by an Act of
Parliament.
(5) The office of a puisne judge shall not be
abolished while there is a substantive holder thereof.
(6) The High Court shall be a superior court of
record and, except as otherwise provided by Parliament, shall have
the powers
of such a court.
(7) The High Court shall have jurisdiction to
supervise any civil or criminal proceedings before any subordinate
court or any
court-martial and may make such orders, issue such
writs and give such directions as it may consider appropriate for
the purpose
of ensuring that justice is duly administered by any
such court.
(8) The Chief Justice may make rules with respect
to the practice and procedure of the High Court in relation to the
jurisdiction
and power conferred on it by clause (7).
|
High Court
|
|
95. (1) The puisne judges shall, subject to
ratification by the National Assembly, be appointed by the
President on the advice
of the Judicial Service Commission.
(2) The Chairman and the Deputy Chairman of the
Industrial Relations Court shall be appointed by the President on
the advice
of the Judicial Service Commission.
(3) The provisions of Articles 98 and 99 shall
with the necessary modifications apply to the Chairman and the
Deputy Chairman
of the Industrial Relations Court.
|
Appointment of puisne judges, Chairman and Deputy
Chairman of Industrial Relations Court
|
|
96. Any person appointed under Article 93 to act
as a judge of the Supreme Court shall continue to act for the
period of that
person's appointment or, if no such period is
specified, until such appointment is revoked by the President:
Provided that the President may permit a person
whose appointment to act as a judge of the Supreme Court has
expired or been
revoked to continue to act for such period as may
be necessary to enable that person to deliver judgement or to do
any other
thing in relation to proceedings that were commenced
before such person.
|
Acting Judge of Supreme Court or of High Court
to act or hold office until appointment expires or is revoked
|
|
97. (1) Subject to clause (2), a person shall not
be qualified for appointment as a judge of the Supreme Court, a
puisne judge
or Chairman or Deputy Chairman of the Industrial
Relations Court unless-
(a) he holds or has held high judicial office; or
(b) he holds one of the specified
qualifications and has held one or other of the following
qualifications
(i) in the case of a Supreme Court Judge, for a total period of
not less than fifteen years; or
(ii) in the case of a puisne judge, the
Chairman and Deputy Chairman of the Industrial Relations Court,
for a total period
of not less than ten years.
(2) Where the President or the Judicial Service
Commission, as the case may be, is satisfied that, by reason of
special circumstances,
a person who holds one of the specified
qualifications is worthy, capable and suitable to be appointed as
a judge of the Supreme
Court, a puisne judge or Chairman or Deputy
Chairman of the Industrial Relations Court, notwithstanding that
he has not held
one or other of those qualifications for a total
period of not less than fifteen years or ten years, as the case
may be, the
President acting in the case of a judge of the Supreme
Court, puisne judge or Chairman or Deputy Chairman of the
Industrial
Relations Court in accordance with the advise of the
Judicial Service Commission, may dispense with the requirement
that such
person holds one or other of the specified
qualifications for a total period of not less than the period
specified in clause
(1).
(3) In this Article," the specified
qualifications " means the professional qualifications
specified in the Legal
Practitioners Act, one of which must be
held by any person before he may apply under that Act to be
admitted as a practitioner
in the Republic.
(4) For the purposes of this Article and of
Articles 93 and 94, "a person qualified for appointment"
means a judge
of the Supreme Court, a puisne judge or Chairman or
Deputy Chairman of the Industrial Relations Court and includes a
person
in respect of whom the President or Judicial Service
Commission, as the case may be, is satisfied as provided for in
clause
(2).
|
Qualifications for appointment as Supreme Court
Judge, Puisne Judge, Chairman and Deputy Chairman of Industrial
Relations Court
|
|
98. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Article, a person holding the office of a judge of the Supreme
Court or the office
of a judge of the High Court shall vacate that
office on attaining the age of sixty-five years:
Provided that the President
(a) may permit a judge of the High Court in accordance with the
advice of the Judicial Service Commission, or a judge of
the
Supreme Court, who has attained that age to continue in office
for such period as may be necessary to enable him to deliver
judgement or to do any other thing in relation to proceedings
that were commenced before him before he attained that age;
(b) may appoint a judge of the High Court in
accordance with the advice of the Judicial Service Commission or
a judge of the
Supreme Court, who has attained the age of
sixty-five years, for such further period, not exceeding seven
years, as the President
may determine.
(2) A Judge of the Supreme Court, High Court,
Chairman or Deputy Chairman of the Industrial Relations Court may
be removed from
office only for inability to perform the functions
of office, whether arising from infirmity of body or mind,
incompetence
or misbehavior and shall not be so removed except in
accordance with the provision of this Article.
(3) If the President considers that the question
of removing a judge of the Supreme Court or of the High Court
under this Article
ought to be investigated, then
(a) he shall appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a Chairman
and not less than two other members, who hold or have held
high
judicial office;
(b) the tribunal shall inquire into the
matter and report on the facts thereof to the
President and advise the President whether
the judge ought to be removed from office under this Article for
inability as aforesaid
or for misbehaviour.
(4) Where a tribunal appointed under clause (3)
advises the President that a judge of the Supreme Court or of the
High Court
ought to be removed from office for inability, or
incompetence or for misbehaviour, the President shall remove such
judge from
office.
(5) If the question of removing a judge of the
Supreme Court or of the High Court from office has been referred
to a tribunal
under clause (3), the President may suspend the
judge from performing the functions of his office, and any such
suspension
may at any time be revoked by the President and shall
in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal advises the
President
that the judge ought to be removed from office.
(6) The provisions of this Article shall be
without prejudice to the provisions of Article 96.
|
Tenure of office of Judges of Supreme Court and
High Court
|
|
99. A judge of the Supreme Court or of the High
Court shall not enter upon the duties of his office unless he has
taken and
subscribed to the oath of allegiance and such oath for
the due execution of his office as may be prescribed by or under
an
Act of Parliament:
Provided that a person who has once taken and
subscribed to the said oaths may enter upon the duties of any such
office without
again taking and subscribing such oaths.
|
Oaths to be taken by Judge
|
PART VII
DEFENCE AND NATIONAL SECURITY
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
100. (1) There shall be an armed force to be
known as the Zambia Defence Force.
(2) The Zambia Defence Force shall be
non-partisan, national in character, patriotic, professional,
disciplined, productive
and subordinate to the civilian authority
as established under this Constitution.
(3) Members of the Zambia Defence Force shall be
citizens of Zambia and of good character.
(4) A person shall not raise an armed force
except in accordance with this Constitution.
|
The Zambia Defence Force
|
|
101. The functions of the Zambia Defence Force
shall be to
(a) preserve and defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity
of Zambia;
(b) co-operate with the civilian authority
in emergency situations and in cases of natural disasters;
(c) foster harmony and understanding between
the Zambia Defence Force and civilians;
and
(d) engage in productive activities for the
development of Zambia.
|
Functions of Defence Force
|
|
102. Parliament shall make laws regulating the
Zambia Defence Force, and in particular, providing for
(a) the organs and structures of the Zambia Defence Force;
(b) the recruitment of persons into the
Zambia Defence Force from every district of Zambia;
(c) the terms and conditions of service of
members of the Zambia Defence Force; and
(d) the deployment of troops outside of
Zambia.
|
Parliament to regulate Defence Force
|
|
103. (1) There shall be a police force to be
known as the Zambia Police Force and such other police forces as
Parliament may
by law prescribe.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this
Constitution, every police force in Zambia shall be organised and
administered in
such a manner and shall have such functions as
Parliament may by law prescribe.
(3) The Zambia Police Force shall be
nationalistic, patriotic, professional, disciplined, competent and
productive; and its
members shall be citizens of Zambia and of
good character.
|
Zambia Police Force
|
|
104. The functions of the Zambia Police Force
shall include the following:
(a) to protect life and property;
(b) to preserve law and order;
(c) to detect and prevent crime;
(d) to co-operate with the civilian
authority and other security organs established under this
Constitution and with the population
generally.
|
Functions of Zambia Police Force
|
|
105. Parliament shall make laws regulating the
Zambia Police Force, and in particular, providing for
(a) the organs and structures of the Zambia Police Force;
(b) the recruitment of persons into the
Zambia Police Force from every district of Zambia;
(c) terms and conditions of service of
members of the Zambia Police Force; and
(d) the regulation generally of the Zambia
Police Force.
|
Parliament to regulate Zambia Police Force
|
|
106. There shall be the Zambia Prison Service.
|
Prison Service
|
|
107. Parliament shall make laws regulating the
Zambia Prison Service, and in particular, providing for
(a) the organs and structures of the Zambia Prison Service;
(b) the recruitment of persons to the Zambia
Prison Service from every district of Zambia;
(c) the terms and conditions of service of
members of the Zambia Prison Service; and
(d) the regulation generally of the Zambia
Prison Service.
|
Parliament to regulate Zambia Prison Service
|
|
108. (1) There shall be a Zambia Security
Intelligence Service.
(2) Parliament shall make laws regulating the
Zambia Security Intelligence Service, and in particular, providing
for
(a) the organs and structures of the Zambia Security Intelligence
Serivce;
(b) the recruitment of persons into the
Zambia Security Intelligence Service from every district of
Zambia;
(c) the terms and conditions of service of
members of the Zambia Security Intelligence Service; and
(d) the regulation generally of the Zambia
Security Intelligence Service.
|
Zambia Security Intelligence Service
|
PART VIII
LOCAL GOVERNMENT SYSTEM
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
109. (1) There shall be such system of local
government in Zambia as may be prescribed by an Act of Parliament.
(2) The system of local government shall be based
on democratically elected councils on the basis of universal adult
suffrage.
|
Local Government System
|
PART IX
DIRECTIVE PRINCIPLES OF STATE POLICY AND THE DUTIES
OF A CITIZEN
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
110. (1) The Directive Principles of State Policy
set out in this Part shall guide the Executive, the Legislature
and the Judiciary,
as the case may be, in the-
(a) development of national policies;
(b) implementation of national policies;
(c) making and enactment of laws; and
(d) application of the Constitution and any
other law.
(2) The application of the Directive Principles
of State Policy may be observed only in so far as State resources
are able to
sustain their application, or if the general welfare
of the public so unavoidably demands, as may be determined by
Cabinet.
|
Application of Directive Principles of State
Policy
|
|
111. The Directive Principles of State Policy set
out in this Part shall not be justiciable and shall not thereby,
by themselves,
despite being referred to as rights in certain
instances, be legally enforceable in any court, tribunal or
administrative institution
or entity.
|
Directives not to be justiciable
|
|
112. The following Directives shall be the
Principles of State Policy for the purposes of this Part:
(a) the State shall be based on democratic
principles;
(b) the State shall endeavour to create an
economic environment which shall encourage individual initiative
and self reliance
among the people and promote private
investment;
(c) the State shall endeavour to create
conditions under which all citizens shall be able to secure
adequate means of livelihood
and opportunity to obtain
employment;
(d) the State shall endeavour to provide
clean and safe water, adequate medical and health facilities and
decent shelter for
all persons, and take measures to constantly
improve such facilities and amenities;
(e) the State shall endeavour to provide
equal and adequate educational opportunities in all fields and at
all levels for
all;
(f) the State shall endeavour to provide to
persons with disabilities, the aged and other disadvantaged
persons such social
benefits and amenities as are suitable to
their needs and are just and equitable;
(g) the State shall take measures to promote
the practice, enjoyment and development by any person of that
person's culture,
tradition, custom or language insofar as these
are not inconsistent with this Constitution;
(h) the State shall strive to provide a
clean and healthy environment for all;
(i) the State shall promote sustenance,
development and public awareness of the need to manage the land,
air and water resources
in a balanced and sustainable manner for
the present and future generation; and
(j) the State shall recognise the right of
every person to fair labour practices and safe and healthy
working conditions.
|
Directive Principles of State Policy
|
|
113. It shall be the duty of every citizen to
(a) be patriotic and loyal to Zambia and to promote its
well-being;
(b) contribute to the well-being of the
community where that citizen lives, including the observance of
health controls;
(c) foster national unity and live in
harmony with others;
(d) promote democracy and the rule of law;
(e) vote in national and local government
elections;
(f) provide defence and military service
when called upon;
(g) carry out with discipline and honesty
legal public functions;
(h) pay all taxes and duties legally due and
owing to the State; and
(i) assist in the enforcement of the law at
all times.
|
Duties of citizen
|
PART X
FINANCE
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
114. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Article, taxation shall not be imposed or altered except by or
under an Act of Parliament.
(2) Except as provided by clauses (3) and (4),
Parliament shall not confer upon any other person or authority
power to impose
or to alter, otherwise than by reduction, any
taxation.
(3) Parliament may make provision under which the
President or the Vice-President or a Minister may by order provide
that, on
or after the publication of a Bill being a Bill approved
by the President that it is proposed to introduce into the
National
Assembly and providing for the imposition or alteration
of taxation, such provisions of the Bill as may be specified in
the
order shall, have the force of law for such period and subject
to such conditions as may be prescribed by Parliament:
Provided that any such order shall, unless sooner
revoked, cease to have effect
(i) if the Bill to which it relates is not passed within such
period from the date of its first reading in the National
Assembly as may be prescribed by Parliament;
(ii) if, after the introduction of the
Bill to which it relates, Parliament is prorogued or the
National Assembly is dissolved;
(iii) if, after the passage of the Bill to
which it relates, the President refuses his assent thereto; or
(iv) at the expiration of a period of four
months from the date on which it came into operation or such
longer period
from that date as may be specified in any
resolution passed by the National Assembly after the Bill to
which it relates
has been introduced.
(4) Parliament may confer upon any authority
established by law for the purposes of local government power to
impose taxation
within the area for which that authority is
established and to alter taxation so imposed.
(5) Where the Appropriation Act in respect of a
financial year has not come into force at the expiration of six
months from
the commencement of that financial year, the operation
of any law relating to the collection or recovery of any tax upon
any
income or profits or any duty or customs or excise shall be
suspended until that Act comes into force:
Provided that
(i) in any financial year in which the National Assembly stands
dissolved at the commencement of that year, the period
of six
months shall begin from the day upon which the National
Assembly first sits following that dissolution instead
of from
the commencement of the financial year.
(ii) the provisions of this clause shall
not apply in any financial year in which the National Assembly
is dissolved after
the laying of estimates in accordance with
Article 115 and before the Appropriation Bill relating to those
estimates
is passed by Parliament.
|
Impositon of taxation
|
|
115. (1) Moneys shall not be expended from the
general revenues of the Republic unless-
(a) the expenditure is authorised by a warrant under the hand of
the President;
(b) the expenditure is charged by this
Constitution or any other law on the general revenues of the
Republic; or
(c) the expenditure is of moneys received by
a department of government and is made under the provisions of
any law which
authorises that department to retain and expend
those
moneys for defraying the expenses of the
department.
(2) A warrant shall not be issued by the
President authorising expenditure from the general revenues of the
Republic unless
(a) the expenditure is authorised by an Appropriation Act;
(b) the expenditure is necessary to carry on
the services of the Government in respect of any period, not
exceeding four months,
beginning at the commencement of a
financial year during which the Appropriation Act for that
financial year is not in force;
(c) the expenditure has been proposed in a
supplementary estimate approved by the National Assembly;
(d) provision does not exist for the
expenditure and the President considers that there is such an
urgent need to incur the
expenditure that it would not be in the
public interest to delay the authorisation of the expenditure
until such time as
a supplementary estimate can be laid before
and approved by the National Assembly; or
(e) the expenditure is incurred on capital
projects continuing from the previous financial year and is so
incurred before
commencement of the Appropriation Act for the
current financial year.
(3) The President shall, immediately after he
signs any warrant authorising expenditure from the general
revenues of the Republic,
cause a copy of the warrant to be
transmitted to the Auditor-General.
(4) The issue of warrants under paragraph (d) of
clause (2), the investment of moneys forming part of the general
revenues of
the Republic and the making of advances from such
revenues shall be subject to such limitations and conditions as
Parliament
may prescribe.
(5) For the purposes of this Article the
investment of moneys forming part of the general revenues of the
Republic or the making
of recoverable advances therefrom shall not
be regarded as expenditure, and the expression "investment of
moneys"
means investment in readily marketable securities and
deposits with a financial institution approved by the Minister
responsible
for finance.
|
Withdrawal of moneys from general revenues
|
|
116. Where in any financial year any expenditure
has been authorised by a warrant issued by the President under
paragraph (d)
of clause (2) Article 115, the Minister responsible
for finance shall cause a supplementary estimate relating to that
expenditure
to be laid before the National Assembly for its
approval before the expiration of a period of four months from the
issue of
the warrant or, if the National Assembly is not sitting
at the expiration of that period, at the first sitting of the
National
Assembly thereafter.
|
Supplementary estimates in respect of expenditure
authorised by warrant
|
|
117. (1) The Minister responsible for finance
shall cause to be prepared and shall lay before the National
Assembly within three
months after the commencement of each
financial year estimates of the revenues and expenditure of the
Republic for that financial
year.
(2) When the estimates of the expenditure have
been approved by the National Assembly, the heads of the estimates
together with
the amount approved in respect of each shall be
included in a Bill to be known as an Appropriation Bill which
shall be introduced
in the National Assembly to provide for the
payment of those amounts for the purposes specified out of the
general revenues
of the Republic.
(3) Nothing in this Article shall be construed as
requiring the approval of the National Assembly for that part of
any estimates
which relate to, or as requiring the inclusion in an
Appropriation Bill of provisions authorising the expenditure of,
sums
which are charged on the general revenues of the Republic by
this Constitution or any other law.
(4) Where any supplementary expenditure has been
authorised in respect of any financial year for any purpose and
(a) an amount has not been appropriated for that purpose under
any head of expenditure by the Appropriation Act for that
financial year; or
(b) the amount of the supplementary
expenditure is such that the total amount expended for the
purposes of the head of expenditure
in which expenditure for that
purpose was included is in excess of the amount so appropriated
under that head, the Minister
responsible for finance shall
introduce in the National Assembly not later than fifteen months
after the end of that financial
year or, if the National Assembly
is not sitting at the expiration of that period, within one month
of the first sitting
of the National Assembly thereafter, a Bill,
to be known as a Supplementary Appropriation Bill, confirming the
approval of
Parliament of such expenditure, or excess of
expenditure, as the case may be.
(5) Where, in any financial year, expenditure has
been incurred without the authorisation of Parliament, the
Minister responsible
for finance shall, on approval of such
expenditure by the appropriate committee of the National Assembly,
introduce in the
National Assembly, not later than thirty months
after the end of that financial year or, if the National Assembly
is not sitting
at the expiration of that period, within one month
of the first sitting of the National Assembly thereafter, a Bill
to be known
as the Excess Expenditure Appropriation Bill, for the
approval by Parliament of such expenditure.
|
Appropriation Acts and Supplementary
Appropriation Acts
|
|
118. (1) The Minister responsible for finance
shall cause to be prepared and shall lay before the National
Assembly not later
than nine months after the end of each
financial year, a financial report in respect of that year.
(2) A financial report in respect of a financial
year shall include accounts showing the revenue and other moneys
received by
the Government in that financial year, the expenditure
of the Government in that financial year other than expenditure
charged
by this Constitution or any other law on the general
revenues of the Republic, the payments made in the financial year
otherwise
than for the purposes of expenditure, a statement of the
financial position of the Republic at the end of the financial
year
and such other information as Parliament may prescribe.
|
Financial report
|
|
119. (1) There shall be paid to the holders of
the offices to which this Article applies such salary and such
allowances as
may be prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament.
(2) The salaries and any allowances payable to
the holders of offices to which this Article applies shall be a
charge on the
general revenues of the Republic.
(3) The salary payable to the holder of any
office to which this Article applies and his terms of office
shall not be altered
to his disadvantage after his appointment.
(4) Where a person's salary or terms of office
depend upon his option, the salary or terms for which he opts
shall, for the
purposes of clause (3), be deemed to be more
advantageous to him than any others for which he might have opted.
(5) This Article applies to the offices of Chief
Justice, Deputy Chief Justice, judge of the Supreme Court,
Attorney-General,
judge of the High Court, Investigator-General,
Solicitor-General, Director of Public Prosecutions, Secretary to
Cabinet and
Auditor-General and to such other offices as may be
prescribed by an Act of Parliament.
|
Remunerations of certain officers
|
|
120 (1) There shall be charged on the general
revenues of the republic all debt charges for which the Government
is liable.
(2) For the purposes of the Article, debt charges
include interest, sinking fund charges, the repayment or
amortisation of debt,
and all expenditure in connection with the
raising of the loans on the security of the revenues of the former
Protectorate
of Northern Rhodesia or the Republic and on the
service and redemption of debt thereby created.
|
Public debt
|
|
121. (1) There shall be an Auditor-General for
the Republic whose office shall be a public office and who shall,
subject to
ratification by the National Assembly, be appointed by
the President.
(2) It shall be the duty of the Auditor-General
(a) to satisfy himself that the provisions of this Part are being
complied with;
(b) satisfy himself that the moneys expended
have been applied to the purposes for which they were
appropriated by the Appropriation
Act or in accordance with the
approved supplementary estimates, or in accordance with the
Excess Expenditure Appropriation
Act, as the case may be, and
that the expenditure conforms to the authority that governs it;
(c) to audit the accounts relating to the
general revenues of the Republic and the expenditure of moneys
appropriated by Parliament,
the National Assembly, the
Judicature, the accounts relating to the stocks and stores of the
Government and the accounts
of such other bodies as may be
prescribed by or under any law;
(d) to audit the accounts relating to any
expenditure charged by this Constitution or any other law on the
general revenues
of the Republic and to submit a report thereon
to the President not later than twelve months after the end of
each financial
year.
(3) The Auditor-General and any officer
authorised by him shall have access to all books, records, reports
and other documents
relating to any of the accounts referred to in
clause (2).
(4) The Auditor-General shall, not later than
twelve months after the end of each financial year, submit a
report on the accounts
referred to in paragraph (c) of clause (2)
in respect of that financial year to the President who shall, not
later than seven
days after the first sitting of the National
Assembly next after the receipt of such report, cause it to be
laid before the
National Assembly; and if the President makes
default in laying the report before the National Assembly, the
Auditor-General
shall submit the report to the Speaker of the
National Assembly, or if the office of the Speaker is vacant or if
the Speaker
is for any reason unable to perform the functions of
his office, to the Deputy Speaker, who shall cause it to be laid
before
the National Assembly.
(5) The Auditor-General shall perform such other
duties and exercise such other powers in relation to all accounts
of the Government
or the accounts of other public authorities or
other bodies as may be prescribed by or under any law.
(6) In the exercise of his functions under
clauses (2), (3) and (4), the Auditor-General shall not be
subjected to the direction
or control of any other person or
authority.
|
Auditor-General
|
|
122. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Article, a person holding the office of Auditor-General shall
vacate his office when
he attains the age of sixty years.
(2) A person holding the office of
Auditor-General may be removed from office only for inability to
perform the functions of
his office, whether arising from
infirmity of body or mind, or for incompetence or for misbehaviour
and shall not be so removed
except in accordance with the
provisions of this Article.
(3) If the National Assembly resolves that the
question of removing a person holding the office of
Auditor-General from office
under this Article ought to be
investigated then
(a) the National Assembly shall, by resolution appoint a tribunal
which shall consist of a Chairman and not less than two
other
members, who hold or have held high judicial office;
(b) the tribunal shall inquire into the
matter and report on the facts thereof to the National Assembly;
and
(c) the National Assembly shall consider the
report of the tribunal at the first convenient sitting of the
National Assembly
after it is received and may, upon such
consideration, by resolution, remove the Auditor-General from
office.
(4) If the question of removing a person holding
the office of Auditor-General from office has been referred to a
tribunal under
this Article, the National Assembly may, by
resolution, suspend that person from performing the functions of
his office, and
any such suspension may at any time be revoked by
the National Assembly by resolution and shall in any case cease to
have effect
if, upon consideration of the report of the tribunal
in accordance with the provisions of this Article, the National
Assembly
does not remove the Auditor-General from office.
(5) A person who holds or has held the office of
Auditor-General shall not be appointed to hold or to act in any
other public
office.
(6) A person who holds the office of
Auditor-General may resign upon giving three months' notice to the
President.
|
Tenure of office of Auditor-General
|
PART XI
SERVICE COMMISSIONS
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
123. (1) There shall be established for the
Republic a Judicial Service Commission which shall have functions
conferred on it
by this Constitution and such other functions and
powers, as may be prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament.
(2) Parliament may establish for the Republic
other Commissions which, together with the Judicial Service
Commission, are hereafter
collectively referred to as Service
Commissions, which shall have such functions and powers in
relation to the public service,
or in relation to persons in
public employment other than constitutional office holders or
public officers, as may be prescribed
by or under an Act of
Parliament.
(3) Commissions other than Service Commissions
may be established for the Republic by or under an Act of
Parliament and shall
have such functions and powers as may be
prescribed by or under such Act.
(4) Nothing in the foregoing precludes provision
being made by or under an Act of Parliament to confer on a Service
Commission
functions and powers in relation to matters other than
public employment.
124. (1) The law to be applied with respect to
any pension benefits that were granted to any person before the
commencement
of this Constitution shall be the law that was in
force at the date on which those benefits were granted or any law
in force
at a later date that is not less favourable to that
person. Pension laws and protection
(2) The law to be applied with respect to any
pension benefits not being benefits to which clause (1) applies,
shall
(a) in so far as those benefits are wholly in respect of a period
of service as a public officer, as any officer in the department
of the Clerk or the National Assembly, or as a member of the
armed forces, that commenced before the commencement of this
Constitution, be the law that was in force immediately before
that date; and
(b) in so far as those benefits are wholly
or partly in respect of a period of service as a public officer,
as any officer
in the department of the Clerk of the National
Assembly, or as a member of the armed forces, that commenced
after the commencement
of this Constitution, be the law in force
on the date on which that period of service commenced;
or any law in force at a later date that is not
less favourable to that person.
(3) Where a person is entitled to exercise an
option as to which of two or more laws shall apply in his case,
the law for which
he opts shall, for the purposes of this Article,
be deemed to be more favourable to him than the other law or laws.
(4) All pension benefits shall, except to the
extent to which they are a charge on a fund established by or
under any law and
have been duly paid out of that fund to the
person or authority to whom payment is due, be a charge on the
general revenues
of the Republic.
(5) In this Article "pension benefits"
means any pensions, compensation, gratuities or other like
allowances for persons
in respect of their service as public
officers, as officers in the department of the Clerk of the
National Assembly or as members
of the armed forces or for the
widows, children, dependants or personal representatives of such
persons in respect of such
service.
(6) References in this Article to the law with
respect to pension benefits include, without prejudice to their
generality, references
to the law regulating the circumstances in
which such benefits may be granted or in which the grant of such
benefits may be
refused, the law regulating the circumstances in
which any such benefits that have been granted may be withheld,
reduced in
amount or suspended, and the law regulating the amount
of any such benefits:
Provided that, notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in this Constitution or any other written law,
such references
shall not be so construed as to include the law
regulating the age of compulsory retirement.
(7) In this Article
(a) references to service as a public officer includes references
to service as a public officer under the Government of
the
territories which on the 24th October, 1964, became the sovereign
Republic of Zambia and references to service as a member
of the
teaching service of the said Government;
(b) references to service as an office in
the department of the Clerk of the National Assembly includes
reference to service
as an officer in the department of the Clerk
of the Legislative Assembly of the said territories; and
(c) references to service as a member of the
armed forces include references to service as a member of the
armed forces of
the said territories.
|
Commissions |
PART XII
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
125. (1) There is hereby established a Human
Rights Commission.
(2) The Human Rights Commission shall be
autonomous. |
Establishment of Human Rights Commission and its
independence
|
|
126. The functions, powers, composition, funding
and administrative procedures, including the employment of staff,
of the Human
Rights Commission shall be prescribed by or under an
Act of Parliament.
|
Functions, powers, composition, procedure, etc. of
Human Rights Commission |
PART XIII
CHIEFS AND HOUSE OF CHIEFS
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
127. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, the Institution of Chief shall exist in any area of
Zambia in accordance
with the culture, customs and traditions or
wishes and aspirations of the people to whom it applies.
(2) In any community, where the issue of a Chief
has not been resolved, the issue shall be resolved by the
community concerned
using a method prescribed by an Act of
Parliament.
|
The Institution of Chief
|
|
128. The following concepts and principles shall
apply to Chiefs:
(a) the Institution of Chief shall be a
corporation sole with perpetual succession and with
capacity to sue and be sued and to hold
assets or properties in trust for itself and the people
concerned;
(b) nothing in paragraph (a) shall be taken
to prohibit a Chief from holding any asset or
property acquried in a personal capacity;
and
(c) a traditional leader or cultural leader
shall enjoy such privileges and benefits as may be
conferred by the Government and the local
government or as that leader may be entitled to
under culture, custom and tradition.
|
Concept and principles relating to Institution of
Chiefs
|
|
129. A person shall not, while remaining a Chief,
join or participate in partisan politics.
|
Chief not to be partisan
|
|
130. There shall be a House of Chiefs for the
Republic which shall be an advisory body to the Government on
traditional, customary
and any other matters referred to it by the
President.
|
House of Chiefs
|
|
131. Notwithstanding Article 130, the House of
Chiefs may
(a) consider and discuss any Bill dealing with, or touching on,
custom or tradition before it is introduced into the National
Assembly;
(b) initiate, discuss and decide on matters
that relate to customary law and practice;
(c) consider and discuss any other matter
referred to it for its consideration by the President or approved
by the President
for consideration by the House; and
(d) submit resolutions on any Bill or other
matter referred to it to the President, and the President shall
cause such resolutions
to be laid before the National Assembly.
|
Functions of House of Chiefs
|
|
132. (1) The House of Chiefs shall consist of
twenty-seven Chiefs.
(2) The members referred to in clause (1) shall
consist of three chiefs elected by the Chiefs from each of the
nine Provinces
of the Republic.
(3) The Chairman and the Vice-Chairman shall be
elected from amongst the members.
|
Composition of House of Chiefs |
|
133. (1) A member of the House of Chiefs-
(a) shall hold office for a period of three years and may be
re-elected for a further period of three years; or
(b) may resign upon giving one month's
notice in writing to the Chairman.
(2) The office of member shall become vacant
(a) upon his death;
(b) if he ceases to be a Chief;
(c) if any other circumstances arise that
would cause him to be disqualified for election;
(d) if he becomes a candidate to any
election, or accepts an appointment, to any office in a political
party;
(e) if he is adjudged or becomes an
undischarged bankrupt; or
(f) if he is declared or becomes of unsound
mind under any law in Zambia.
|
Tenure of office and vacancy
|
|
134. The Chairman and every member of the House
of Chiefs shall take an oath of allegiance.
|
Oaths of members of House of Chiefs
|
|
135. There shall be a Clerk of the House of
Chiefs and such other staff as may be necessary for carrying out
the functions under
this Part.
|
Staff of House of Chiefs
|
|
136. Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, the President may by statutory instrument, make
regulations for
(a) the appointment of the Clerk and other officers of the House
of Chiefs;
(b) provide for the remuneration of the
Chairman, the Vice-Chairman and other members of the House;
(c) the proceedings and conduct of the House
of Chiefs;
(d) the application of any of the privileges
and immunities of the National Assembly and its members to the
House of Chiefs
and its members; and
(e) such other matters as are necessary or
conducive to the better carrying out of the purposes of this
Part.
|
President may make regulations
|
PART XIV
MISCELLANEOUS
(As amended by Act No. 18 of 1996)
|
137. (1) Any person who is appointed or elected
to any office established by this Constitution may resign from
that office by
writing under his hand addressed to the persons or
authority by whom he was appointed or elected:
Provided that in the case of a person who holds
office as Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly his
resignation
from that office shall be addressed to the National
Assembly, and in the case of an elected or nominated member of the
National
Assembly his resignation shall be addressed to the
Speaker.
(2) The resignation of any person from any office
established by this Constitution shall take effect when the
writing signifying
the resignation is received by the person or
authority to whom it is addressed or by any person authorised by
that person or
authority to receive it.
|
Resignations |
|
138. (1) Where any person has vacated any office
established by this Constitution he may, if qualified, be
appointed or elected
again to hold that office in accordance with
the provisions of this Constitution.
(2) Where a power is conferred by this
Constitution upon any person to make any appointment to any
office, a person may be appointed
to that office notwithstanding
that some other person may be holding that office, when that other
person is on leave of absence
pending the relinquishment of the
office; and where two or more persons are holding the same office
by reason of an appointment
made in pursuance of this clause, then
for the purposes of any function conferred upon the holder of that
office, the person
last appointed shall be deemed to be the sole
holder of the office.
|
Re-appointment and concurrent appointment
|
|
139. (1) In this Constitution, unless the context
otherwise requires:
"Act of Parliament" means a law enacted
by Parliament;
"Article" means an Article of this
Constitution;
"Chief" means a person who is
recognised by the President under the provisions of the Chiefs Act
or any law amending
or replacing that Act as the Litunga of
Western Province, a Paramount Chief, Senior Chief, Chief or
Sub-Chief or a person who
is appointed as Deputy Chief;
"clause" means a clause of the Article
in which the word occurs;
"the Commonwealth" includes any
dependency of a country which is a member of the Commonwealth;
"financial year" means the period of
twelve months ending on the 31st December in any year or on such
other day as
may be prescribed by or under an Act of Parliament:
Provided that by or under an Act of Parliament
prescribing a day other than the 31st December as the
terminal day of the financial year the said period of twelve
months may be extended or reduced for any one
financial year for
the purposes of effecting such prescribed change;
"the Gazette" means the official
Gazette of the Government of Zambia;
"High Court" means the High Court
established by this Constitution;
"high judicial office" means the office
of a judge of a court of unlimited jurisdiction in civil and
criminal matters
in some part of the Commonwealth or in the
Republic of Ireland or the office of a court having jurisdiction
in appeals from
such a court;
"House" means the National Assembly;
"meeting" means all sittings of the
National Assembly held during a period beginning when the National
Assembly first
sits after being summoned at any time and
terminating when the Assembly is adjourned sine die or at the
conclusion of a session;
"oath" includes affirmation;
"the oath of allegiance" means such
oath of allegiance as may be prescribed by law;
"paragraph" means a paragraph of the
clause in which the word occurs;
"person" includes any company or
association or body of persons, corporate or unincorporate;
"public office" means an office of
emolument in the public office;
"public officer" means a person holding
or acting in any public office;
"the public service" subject to clauses
(2) and (3) shall have the meaning assigned to it by an Act of
Parliament;
"session" means the sitting of the
National Assembly beginning when it first sits after the coming
into operation
of this Constitution or after Parliament is
prorogued or dissolved at any time and ending when Parliament is
prorogued or is
dissolved without having been prorogued;
"sitting" means a period during which
the National Assembly is sitting without adjournment and includes
any period
during which it is in committee;
"statutory instrument" means any
proclamation, regulation, order, rule, notice or other instrument,
(not being an
Act of Parliament) of a legislative as distinct from
an executive character; and
"Supreme Court" means the Supreme Court
of Zambia established by this Constitution.
(2) In this Constitution, references to offices
in the public service shall not be construed as including
references to the
offices of judges of the Supreme Court and of
the High Court, and to the offices of Chairman, Deputy Chairman,
and members
of the Industrial Relations Court.
(3) In this Constitution references to an office
in the public service shall not be construed as including
references to the
office of Attorney-General, or a member of any
Commission established by this Constitution or by an Act of
Parliament or to
the office of the Clerk of the National Assembly
or any office in the department of the Clerk of the National
Assembly.
(4) For the purposes of this Constitution, a
person shall not be considered as holding a public office by
reason only of the
fact that he is in receipt of a pension or
other like allowance in respect of service under the Government of
Zambia or of
its predecessor Government.
(5) A person shall not be regarded as
disqualified for appointment to any office to which a public
officer is not qualified
to be appointed by reason only that he
holds a public office if he is on leave of absence pending
relinquishment of that office.
(6) In this Constitution, unless the context
otherwise requires, a reference to the holder of an office by the
term designating
his office shall be construed as including a
reference to any person for the time being lawfully acting in or
performing the
functions of that office:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall apply
to references to the President or Vice-President in Articles 36,
37, 39 or
45.
(7) References in this Constitution to the power
to remove a public officer from his office shall be construed as
including
references to any power conferred by any law to require
or permit that officer to retire from public service:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall be
construed as conferring on any person or authority power to
require a judge of
the Supreme Court or of the High Court, the
Investigator-General, the Auditor-General or the Director of
Public Prosecutions
to retire from the public service.
(8) Any provision in this Constitution that vests
in any person or authority power to remove any public officer from
his office
shall be without prejudice to the power of any person
or authority to abolish any office or to any law providing for the
compulsory
retirement of public officers generally or any class of
public officers on attaining an age specified therein.
(9) Where power is vested by this Constitution in
any person or authority to appoint any person to act in or perform
the functions
of any office if the holder thereof is himself
unable to perform those functions, no such appointment shall be
called in question
on the ground that the holder of the office was
unable to perform those functions.
(10) Provisions of this Constitution that any
person or authority shall not be subject to the direction or
control of any other
person or authority in the exercise of any
functions under this Constitution shall not be construed as
precluding a court of
law from exercising jurisdiction in relation
to any question whether that person or authority has performed
those functions
in accordance with this Constitution or any other
law.
(11) When any power is conferred by this
Constitution to make any proclamation, statutory instrument,
order, regulation or rule,
or to issue any direction or
certificate or confer recognition, the power shall be construed as
including the power, exercisable
in like manner, to amend or
revoke any such proclamation, statutory instrument, order,
regulation, rule, direction or certificate
or to withdraw any such
recognition:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall apply
to the power to issue a certificate conferred by clause (2) of
Article 36.
(12) (a) Any reference in this Constitution to a
law that amends or replaces any other law shall be construed as
including a
reference to a law that modifies, re-enacts with or
without amendment or modification, or makes different provision
in lieu
of that other law.
(b) Where any Act passed after the
commencement of this Constitution repeals and re-enacts, with or
without modification,
any provisions thereof, references in this
Constitution to the provisions so repealed shall, unless the
contrary intention
appears, be construed as references to the
provisions so re-enacted.
(c) Where any Act passed after the
commencement of this Constitution repeals any provision thereof
then, unless the contrary
intention appears, the repeal shall not
(i) revive anything not in force or existing at the time at
which the repeal takes effect; or
(ii) affect the previous operation of any
provision so repealed or anything duly done or suffered under
any provision
so repealed; or
(iii) affect any right, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under any
provision so repealed;
or
(iv) affect any penalty, forfeiture or
confiscation or punishment incurred under provision so
repealed; or
(v) affect any investigation, legal
proceeding or remedy in respect of any such right, privilege,
obligation, liability,
penalty, forfeiture or confiscation or
punishment as aforesaid, and any such investigation, legal
proceeding or remedy
may be instituted, continued or enforced,
and any such penalty, forfeiture or confiscation or punishment
may be imposed,
as if the repealing Act had not been passed.
(13) In this Constitution, unless the context
otherwise requires, words and expressions importing the masculine
gender includes
females.
(14) In this Constitution, unless the context
otherwise requires, words and expressions in the singular include
the plural and
words and expressions in the plural include the
singular.
(15) Where this Constitution confers any power or
imposes any duty, the power may be exercised and the duty shall be
performed
from time to time as occasion requires.
(16) Where by any Act which repeals and
re-enacts, with or without modification, any provision of this
Constitution, and which
is not to come into force immediately on
the publication thereof,
there is conferred
(a) a power to make or a power exercisable by making statutory
instruments; or
(b) a power to make appointments; or
(c) a power to do any other thing for the
purposes of the provision in question;
that power may be exercised at any time on or
after the date of publication of the Act in the Gazette:
Provided that an instrument, appointment or thing
made or done under that power shall not, unless it is necessary to
bring the
Act into force, have any effect until the commencement
of the Act.
(17) In computing time for the purposes of any
provision of this Constitution, unless a contrary intention is
expressed
(a) a period of days from the happening of an event or the doing
of any act or thing shall be deemed to be exclusive of the
day on
which the event happens or the act or thing is done;
(b) if the last day of the period is Sunday
or a public holiday which days are in this clause referred to as
"excluded
days" the period shall include the next
following day, not being an
excluded day;
(c) where any act or proceeding is directed
or allowed to be done or taken on a certain day, then, if that
day happens to
be an excluded day the act or proceeding shall be
considered as done or taken in due time if it is done or taken
the next
day afterwards, not being an excluded day;
(d) where an act or proceeding is directed
or allowed to be done or taken within any time not exceeding six
days, excluded
days shall not be reckoned in the computation of
the time.
|
Interpretation |
|