Friday night on the box is the Vice-President’s
Question Time, starring Dotty Scotty as the hapless foot-in-mouth Leader of the
House…
Speaker: I call upon the Honourable Member for
Buka Buka.
Hon. Member for Buka Buka: Mr Speaker Sir,
I rise to ask the Honourable Vice-President whether it is in order for the
government to require opposition MPs to seek permission from the DC and the
police before visiting their own constituencies?
Dotty Scotty: Mr Speaker Sir, if honourable
members of the opposition wish to avoid this inconvenience, all they have to do
is to join the ruling party. If the Honourable Member for Buka Buka would care
to accept an appointment as a deputy minister, the government will provide him
with a mansion and a chauffeur driven Mercedes for each of his concubines. Then
he will be able to live like a king in Lusaka, and never again feel the
slightest temptation to visit his constituency. All his problems will be over.
Hon. Member for Buka Buka: Mr Speaker Sir,
is it in order for the honourable Vice-President to bribe me with the offer of a
ministerial position?
Dotty Scotty: Mr Speaker Sir, I am grievously
hurt that my well intended offer to allow the honourable member to serve his country
has been so dreadfully misconstrued. Therefore my offer is withdrawn.
(General cheering and cries of ‘With
immediate effect’)
Speaker: I call upon the Honourable Member for
Namwanka.
Honourable Member: Does the
Honourable Leader of the House have any explanation on why the Ndola Trade Fair
had only 13 visitors this year, which is severely down from last year’s figure
of 438,214?
Dotty Scotty: This disappointing result is due
to this government’s diligent attention to the rule of law. Unfortunately the
organizers of the Trade Fair had omitted to apply for a police permit to hold a
public gathering, and therefore, under the requirements of the Public Order
Act, the police had no choice except to close it down. Previously the
opposition had claimed that the application of this Act was selective and
partisan, so I am sure that the opposition will now be particularly pleased to
see that in this case the application of the Act affected people of all
political affiliation, age, gender, tribe and religion. I am sure the
opposition would therefore wish to congratulate the government on this fair
minded and even handed application of the law.
Honourable Member for Namwanka: Can his Honour the
Vice-President please inform the House of the fate of the 13 people who managed
to get into the show?
Dotty Scotty: Having failed to raise bail of
K10m each, they are being held in remand prison until trial, hopefully before
the end of next year. In such matters the government is keen to respect the
independence of the judiciary, so nothing more can be said on that score.
Speaker: I call upon the Honourable Member for
Chongololo.
Honourable Member: Prior to the
general election of 2011, the ruling party promised that they would introduce
the Freedom of Information Bill within 90 days. What has happened to this
promise?
Dotty Scotty: This government always keeps its
promises, and the government will soon put this Bill before parliament.
(cries of ‘When? When? When?’)
Dotty Scotty: When? When? I sometimes wonder whether
my right honourable friends on the opposition benches are deaf. As I have
already said, and as ruling party has always promised, the Bill will be
presented within 90 days. I don’t know what more I can say.
Honourable Member for Chongololo: If I may ask a
follow-up question on the freedom of information, when may we expect the
president to hold his first press conference?
Dotty Scotty: I am somewhat taken aback by the
lack of logic in this question, since the Honourable Member for Chongololo has
himself just reminded this August House that the Freedom of Information Act has
not yet been passed. Obviously, until this Act is passed, everything that the
president says must remain confidential, which rules out any possibility of a
press conference.
Honourable Member for Chongololo: When is this
press conference likely to take place?
(Cries of ‘Within 90 days!’ from all sides of the
House)
Dotty Scotty: I am pleased to observe that the
Honourable Member for Chongololo seems to be the only member present who does
not know the answer to his question!
Speaker: I call upon the Honourable Member for
Sukulu.
Honourable Member: The Honourable
Minister for Education has banned private tuition in order to maintain a level
playing field in government schools. But is there a level playing field when
all the ministers’ children attend private schools?
Dotty Scotty: Mr Speaker Sir, it is patently
absurd for the honourable member to claim that all the ministers’ children are
in private schools when no man can be sure how many children he has fathered,
let alone which schools they are attending.
Speaker: I should caution members to come to this
house with factual and verifiable information.
Honourable Minister for Chibuku: Mr Speaker, Sir,
At last I have some important and verifiable information. The time is now
16.00h, and the Members Bar is now open.
(There is a mad scramble for the door, and Dotty
Scotty is left alone, wagging his wobbly chin at the empty Debating Chamber)
Leveling the playing field, I really find it had to comprehend and understand the logic and benefits of such policies to zambians. Especially when private schools will still continue to exist.
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