|
Back to Index
Supreme
Court reserves judgment on bloated cabinet challenge
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
July 19, 2012
The Supreme
Court today reserved judgment in a case in which a civil society
activist is challenging the composition of the bloated cabinet and
wants ministerial portfolios trimmed to 31.
Moven Kufa,
a civil society activist, and The Voice for Democracy Trust appealed
to the Supreme Court after High Court Judge President, Justice George
Chiweshe dismissed their application seeking to compel President
Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai to adhere to
the Constitution
by reducing the ministerial complement of government to 31 from
the current 41.
Although Justice
Chiweshe noted that Kufa was right to say President Mugabe and Prime
Minister Tsvangirai had breached the Constitution by appointing
41 ministers instead of the 31 agreed under the Global
Political Agreement, he ruled that granting Kufa's application
would destabilise the coalition
government, cause unnecessary confusion and prejudice the public
interest.
But a determined
Kufa took his case to the Supreme Court where his lawyer, Advocate
David Ochieng on Thursday 19 July 2012 insisted that President Mugabe
and Prime Minister Tsvangirai had breached the Constitution by appointing
ten more ministers than the constitutionally mandated 31. Ochieng
argued that the appointment of extra ministers by President Mugabe
in consultation with Prime Minister Tsvangirai was unconstitutional
and therefore null and void. He also argued that the bloated executive
is unlawfully chewing up taxpayers' money.
President Mugabe
and Prime Minister Tsvangirai were cited as First and Second Respondents
respectively, together with Youth Development, Indigenisation and
Empowerment Minister, Saviour Kasukuwere, Agriculture, Mechanisation
and Irrigation Development Minister Joseph Made, Tourism and Hospitality
Industry Minister Walter Mzembi, Minister of State in Vice-President
John Nkomo's Office Flora Bhuka, Minister of State in Vice-President
Joice Mujuru's Office Sylvester Nguni, Minister of Health
Henry Madzorera, Minister of National Housing and Social Amenities
Giles Mutsekwa and co-Minister of National Healing Sekai Holland.
The full Supreme
Court Bench made up of Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku, Justices
of Appeal Vernanda Ziyambi, Paddington Garwe, and Anne-Mary Gowora,
and Acting Justice of Appeal Yunus Omerjee heard arguments from
Ochieng and President Mugabe and Prime Minister Tsvangirai's
lawyer, Advocate Lewis Uriri, who opposed Kufa's application.
Uriri also applied for a joinder of the three main political parties
- namely ZANU PF, the MDC-T and MDC - to the application arguing
that the political parties were responsible for nominating the ministers.
Chief Justice
Chidyausiku reserved judgment in the matter. President Mugabe, acting
in consultation with Prime Minister Tsvangirai, appointed a total
of 41 government ministers in February 2009 after the formation
of the coalition government. The number of ministers exceeded by
10 the 31 ministers provided for in terms of Article 20.1. 6 (5)
of Schedule 8 to the Constitution. The ministers cited above were
all appointed after the 31st appointee. Their appointments were
thus made in excess of the 31 ministers provided for in terms of
Schedule 8 to the Constitution.
Visit the ZLHR
fact sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|