The
Pan-African Parliament (PAP)
Permanent Committee on Rules, Privileges and Discipline (Rules Committee),
Chairpersons of Regional Caucuses and Permanent Committees, Members of the
Bureau as well as the PAP Secretariat are set to convene at the Parliament’s
Headquarters in Midrand, South Africa from 8 to 12 March 2021 as part of
technical and political activities aimed at the revision of the Rules of
Procedure of the legislative arm of the African
Union (AU).
The
five-day meeting is aimed at defining the substantive and procedural direction
for an effective and fruitful revision of the Rules of Procedure of the PAP;
and enable the Rules Committee and the PAP Bureau and Bureaux to review and
determine the gaps and areas of concern in the current Rules of Procedure.
The
review process stems from recent institutional developments at the AU level as
well as recent resolutions in PAP
Plenary calling for amendment of specific provisions of the Rules and decisions
of the AU policy organs. The revision of the PAP Rules is also triggered by the necessity to ensure the
continuity of parliamentary activities, through provision of sufficient
guidance to virtual or hybrid meetings which are set to become the ‘new
normal’.
Hon. Chief Fortune Charumbira, Acting President of the PAP, says that
the process is long overdue as Rules of Procedure must be periodically reviewed
to ensure their suitability, currency, relevancy and effectiveness. PAP’s Acting President also notes that
the upcoming meeting of the Rules Committee in consultations with the Bureaux
will lay solid grounds for the entire process culminating into the revision of
the Rules of Procedure.
“In
March 2020, the Rules Committee had already reached a consensus to table a
Resolution at the May Ordinary Session of the PAP, in order to obtain legal
authority to proceed with the revision of the PAP Rules. However, we were not
able to hold an ordinary session due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The upcoming
consultations will therefore enable all relevant stakeholders to reflect and
agree on the substantive aspects and procedural steps for the review of the PAP Rules. We anticipate that the
meeting will result in an approved and realistic roadmap for the revision of
the Rules of Procedure,” says Hon.
Charumbira.
Speaking
on the programme of the meeting, Mr.
Vipya Harawa, Clerk of Parliament, says that the engagement will focus on
guidelines on virtual meetings and roadmap on the revision of the PAP Rules of
Procedure. Mr. Harawa adds that the
meeting will provide an opportunity for a review of PAP 2020 achievements and
consideration of the 2021 institutional work plan and programme of activities.
“A
revision of Rules and Procedure is a process and this inaugural meeting will
set the stage for the adoption of a draft Resolution to be tabled in the next
Plenary, which gives legal authority and formally triggers the process of
revision of the Rules of Procedure. Also, having announced the Secretariat’s
readiness to host virtual statutory meetings of the PAP last month, in line
with directives of the AU leadership, leadership structures of the PAP will
consider proposed guidelines on virtual meetings,” says Mr. Harawa.
Initially
adopted on 21 September 2004, the PAP Rules were amended on 10 October 2011 to
ensure more effective execution of the mandate of the PAP, and to adjust to the
prevailing political and institutional exigencies. The meeting on the revision
of the Rules of Procedure by the Rules Committee, Chairpersons of Regional
Caucuses and Permanent Committees and members of the Bureau, is therefore
expected to ensure the alignment of PAP Rules with the PAP Protocol and
relevant decisions of the AU as well as Plenary resolutions.
Source: Jeffrey Onganga, Media Officer, Pan
African Parliament
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