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Principals
to discuss Chihuri's fate
Tonderai Kwenda, Daily News
February
02, 2012
View this article
on the Daily News website
Principals in the inclusive
government meet tomorrow for a National Security Council (NSC) meeting
that will discuss among other issues the fate of police commissioner-general,
Augustine Chihuri, whose term of office expired on Tuesday.
Chihuri's continued
stay as police boss after the expiry of his contract has become
a thorny issue within the coalition government.
President Robert Mugabe
on one side and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai are set to clash
head on over the fate of Chihuri.
Welshman Ncube,
the leader of the smaller MDC faction is also expected to side with
Tsvangirai. Ncube or a representative from his party attends the
Security Council meeting as a negotiator to the Global
Political Agreement (GPA).
Chihuri's future
is likely to take centre stage among other hot issues such as security
sector reform and increased reports of militarisation of political
process as well as reported heightened presence of soldiers in parts
of rural Zimbabwe.
Other security sector
commanders are set to attend the National Security Council (NSC)
meeting as well as security ministers and negotiators to the GPA.
But it is Chihuri's
future that could hog the limelight, high level sources say.
Tsvangirai and Ncube
have already set the tone for the meeting by declaring that Chihuri
is now out of a job following the expiry of his contract.
Chihuri's
term of office expired on Tuesday, with Tsvangirai and other coalition
government partners immediately saying the country's top
cop was staying onto the post illegitimately with effect from yesterday.
To compound matters,
the Police Service Commission (PSC) that handles Chihuri's
contract is also out of work after its term ended last December.
Coalition government partners are yet to agree on a new PSC board
and again the issue is likely to come up for discussion at tomorrow's
meeting, sources say.
Tsvangirai's MDC,
which is against Chihuri's continued stay in office, says
Zimbabwe effectively has no police commissioner as from midnight
Tuesday.
"As far as we are
concerned this country does not have a police commissioner as from
midnight (Tuesday) because Chihuri's term of office is expiring,"
Tsvangirai's spokesperson Tamborinyoka told the Daily News
on Tuesday.
"As far as the
prime minister is concerned, Chihuri is no longer the police commissioner
because his term expires tonight. This simply means that we will
wait for Mugabe to consult the PM for a replacement," Tamborinyoka
said.
According to Section
6 of the Police Act, the commissioner-general's term of office
expires at the end of four years.
Thereafter, the commissioner-general
may be re-appointed by extending his period of service for 12 months
at the end of which in the absence of the letter of appointment
extending his services, he ceases to be commissioner-general of
police.
Despite the latest clamour
by the MDC for a change of faces in the upper echelons of the country's
security forces, Mugabe's spokesperson, George Charamba recently
told the Daily News that the call by the two MDC formations to have
Chihuri out of office was a ploy for security sector reform.
"The defence forces
are not subject to inter-party negotiations," said Charamba.
"There is nowhere
in the power sharing Global Political Agreement or any clause of
the constitution where it says the re-appointment of security commanders
is going to be the outcome of the inter-party negotiations. This
is the prerogative of the commander-in-chief," said Charamba.
The NSC, which is supposed
to meet once every month, has not been meeting regularly partly
due to Tsvangirai and Mugabe's irregular working schedules.
The meeting comes as
Sadc executive secretary Tomaz Salamao is heading to Zimbabwe to
assess the progress of the GPA and whether the situation permits
for elections this year as demanded by Mugabe.
Tsvangirai has in the
past accused security chiefs of engineering a silent coup and driving
an orgy of violence on behalf of his coalition partner Mugabe.
The MDC has not hidden
the fact that it wants the security chiefs to be retired from service.
The MDC's position
at the ongoing Sadc supervised talks on a roadmap to the country's
elections specifically makes demands that the Commander of the Zimbabwe
Defence Forces Constantine Chiwenga and Chihuri must be retired.
These demands, coupled
with a raft of other displeasures such as the militarisation of
the country's politics, are likely to be put on the table.
NSC also includes security
sector cabinet members, ex-officio members such as Commander of
the Defence Forces, army and Air Force, Commissioner General of
Police, Prisons, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet and
Director General of the Department of State Security.
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