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Herald lies about PM’s advisor
Prime
Minister’s Office
April 05, 2013
The Herald today published
yet another lie, alleging that daggers are out for Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangrai’s political advisor, Alex Magaisa.
For the record, Dr Magaisa
is the PM’s political advisor and not legal advisor as falsely
alleged in the Herald story.
Dr Magaisa continues
to competently execute his duties while the competence of the PM’s
legal team was shown this week when it forced the President to back
down from his attempt to unilaterally and unconstitutionally set
a June 29 harmonized election date.
The President
only back-tracked after the PM’s legal team challenged him
on his proposed date which he had set without due regard to the
GPA,
now part of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe.
The story makes an erroneous
submission that it is only the President who has the executive authority
to proclaim the dates for elections when that is clear that he cannot
legally do that without consulting the Prime Minister.
Secondly, Justice George
Chiweshe did not at any point throw out the legal application by
the Prime Minister contesting the President’s unconstitutional
bid to clandestinely set an election date without consulting him.
The Prime Minister’s
lawyers formally withdrew their application on Thursday afternoon
after President Mugabe backed down from his earlier attempt to sneak
in a June 29 harmonised election date.
Dr Magaisa remains
at work and judging by the Herald‘s story, Daggers out for
Tsvangirai advisor, it appears the so-called daggers have been drawn
out by Zanu PF activists such as Gabriel Chaibva and fringe so-called
political commentators who are quoted in the story.
It would assist The Herald
to report the truth and not to be perennially negative about anything
to do with the Prime Minister of the country, or any of his members
of staff or supporters of the ruling party that he leads.
Zimbabweans expect fair
and objective coverage from the public media but judging by the
overt bias exhibited by The Herald on a daily basis, there is little
wonder why media reforms are now more urgent than ever before, especially
as we approach the next elections which must be fair, free and credible.
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