This is one of the points about which at times people say that some people want to co-govern. We are a government. What does a government do? It runs a country. It has a duty in terms of the mandate given by the people to ensure that things go according to what the people want. [Interjections.] Even though we have three arms, they don't have the same function. You cannot make comparisons in that way and say that simply because government, which is governing, wants to do certain things. If that is the case, it means the judiciary also has that right. It is not a government. I think we must make that distinction. [Applause.]
You cannot elevate people to do tasks they are not supposed to do. It is just like Parliament. Parliament has particular functions that cannot be performed by the other two arms. These functions can only be done by Parliament. That is what it is, because their independence is not absolute; it is relative. That is what it is, because we are governing a country. [Applause.] That is the reality. So, what the Minister has said is absolutely correct. Thank you, hon Speaker. [Applause.]