By Sylivester
Ernest,The Citizen Reporter
Posted Sunday, December 22 2013 at 10:43
Posted Sunday, December 22 2013 at 10:43
In
Summary
- That, some analysts, say, is
apparent, in the wake of four ministers being sacked, and a looming
reshuffle that could see more heads rolling, amid heightened concerns at
levels ranging from the grassroots to Parliament, that the government is a
let-down, in its public service mission.
Related
Stories
Dar es
Salaam. In
re-crafting the Cabinet, the engine of running government
affairs, President Jakaya Kikwete faces a two-in-one challenge:
filling vacant posts, and determining whether the current governance
systems are, or aren’t good enough to enable even the best brains and
dedicated individuals to operate efficiently.
That,
some analysts, say, is apparent, in the wake of four ministers being sacked,
and a looming reshuffle that could see more heads rolling, amid heightened
concerns at levels ranging from the grassroots to Parliament, that the
government is a let-down, in its public service mission.
On
Friday, the president, as top appointing authority, fired four
ministers implicated by a parliamentary select committee with gross human
rights abuse during an operation to tackle poaching, dubbed ‘Operation
Tokomeza’.
Chairman
of the committee James Lembeli revealed shocking incidences of crimes,
including murder, rape and torture committed by soldiers deployed to
execute the operation that triggered much alarm and criticism. He then
proposed that the four minister-- Dr Emmanuel Nchimbi (Home Affairs), Mr Khamis
Kagasheki (Tourism and Natural Resources), Mr Shamsi Vuai Nahodha (Defence and
the National Service) and Dr David Mathayo (Livestock and Fisheries
Development)--take responsibility by resigning.
Shedding
political party affiliations often typical on issues of a relatively mild
nature, MPs supported the proposal, culminating in President Kikwete endorsing
the plea by blessing the sacking of the ministers.
Commentators
who spoke to The Citizen on Sunday pointed out that, whereas departure from the
Cabinet via resignation of, or expulsion by ministers deemed
inefficient or irresponsible was a positive trend, it wasn’t a wholesome
solutions to operational problems.
The Head
must probe the extent to which the governance systems were a
stumbling block to the performance of even ministers who would be
exemplary performers in an ideal environment.
What’s
more, they noted, restricting punitive measures to ministers was unfair and
wouldn’t have long-term positive bearings if subordinate, but nonetheless
key executives such as permanent secretaries and top political
officers implicated in the atrocities are not sent packing.
Political
scientist Bashiru Ali, says the whole governance system in the government was
in such a shambles that even potentially capable ministers wouldn’t
be helpful and whose tenure could consequently be short-lived.
“The same
would happen even if we bring in angels…have you asked yourself how many
ministers have served in the energy and tourism ministries since Kikwete came
to power?” the University of Dar es Salaam lecturer asked. The ministry
of energy has seen three ministers on the wheel since President Kikwete came to
power in 2005 while that of tourism will be having its fourth head after the
next reshuffle. He said President Kikwete’s administration lacked clear
administrative discipline, making even new ministers vulnerable to failure.
“The
system is exhausted…it is ungovernable; this parliament will be investigating
one scandal after another because the system is failing…it needs a major
overhaul,” said Mr Bashiru.
To show
failings in the country’s governance system, the academic said the parliament
itself was suffering from similar accountability problems, making even
the Lembeli’s report questionabl
He queried: “We heard of raping and killings in Mtwara during
gas-related chaos; have you seen any report on those atrocities?”Leader of the opposition Civic United Front (CUF) Prof Ibrahim Lipumba asked President Kikwete to constantly review performance of his ministers before things get out of hand.
Chadema’s Chairman Freeman Mbowe said we would be committing serious political mistakes to pour too much blame on alleged underperforming ministers without critically reviewing how the current governance systems work.
“Contributions in parliament by mostly CCM MPs indicate that the ruling party was losing grip,” said the Hai MP. Mr Mbowe said he expected the President to weed out more unsuitable ministers, citing the Education sector as an example.
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