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Zimbabwe President Mugabe rearranges ministerial portfolios to MDC
disadvantage
VOA
News
March
05, 2010
View
this article on VOA News website
Statutory instruments
published in the state Gazette on Friday indicate the president
trimmed down powers of the Ministry of information and Technology
and the Ministry of Labor, both in MDC hands
President Robert
Mugabe has again moved unilaterally to strip ministers of the Movement
For Democratic Change formation of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
of their powers, escalating tensions in the country's troubled unity
government.
Statutory instruments
published in the state Gazette on Friday indicate the president
trimmed down powers of the Ministry of information and Technology
and the Ministry of Labor, both controlled by the Tsvangirai MDC
formation, and reassigned those powers to ministers of his own ZANU-PF
party.
Information
Communications Technology Minister Nelson Chamisa lost key portfolios
to Transport Minister Nicholas Goche.
Goche thereby
became the Minister of Transport, Communication and Infrastructural
Development, overseeing operations at state-run fixed-line telephone
company TelOne, state cellular provider NetOne, Zimpost and their
governing body, the Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority.
Mr. Mugabe attempted
a similar move in April 2009 but Mr. Tsvangirai declared the maneuver
"null and void" and Mr. Mugabe retreated.
Finance Minister
Tendai Biti, also secretary general of the Tsvangirai MDC formation,
said Mr. Mugabe's actions will seriously affect government
operations.
"I am
afraid to say that clearly there has not been consultation between
the prime minister and the president which is clearly in breach
of the Schedule 8 of the Global
Political Agreement."
Biti added:
"I am afraid to say it is going to be a serious area of contestation
between the two political formations."
Elsewhere, President
Mugabe said Zimbabwe may hold new elections next year whether or
not it completes the process of amending the constitution, and that
he will seek re-election if his party wants him to.
Mr. Mugabe told
reporters Thursday that "if the constitution-making process
succeeds, there will be an election, and if it fails, that too will
lead to an election."
But he said
the principals in the unity government must agree on the way forward
as to new polls.
London-based
political analyst Brilliant Mhlanga told VOA Studio 7 reporter Ntungamili
Nkomo that Mr. Mugabe's statements were disappointing, adding that
Zimbabweans should not allow the government to hold new elections
without a new constitution in place.
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