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Justice
Chiweshe presides over Mugabe's time extension petition
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
August 30, 2012
Judge President
Justice George Chiweshe will on Thursday 30 August 2012 preside
over an urgent chamber application filed by President Robert Mugabe
in a bid to evade contempt of court charges by begging the High
Court for an extension of time allowing him to call for a "mini-general
election" by 1 October 2012 rather than 30 August 2012 as
dictated by the Supreme Court recently.
Justice Chiweshe
will hear the matter in chambers at 16:30hrs on Thursday 30 August
2012.
On Tuesday 28
August 2012, President Mugabe pleaded with the High Court to be
allowed more time to mobilise and ascertain the availability of
financial resources to stage a mini-general election in all the
vacant parliamentary and senatorial constituencies in the country
including local authorities.
In an urgent
application filed by the Civil Division of the Attorney General's
Office, President Mugabe disclosed that he would not be able to
comply with the Supreme Court's order compelling him to gazette
dates for the by-elections by 30 August 2012 and would need a month's
extension to do so.
The Supreme
Court in July confirmed a High Court order that President Mugabe
should call by-elections in three Matabeleland constituencies by
the end of August. This came after President Mugabe had appealed
against High Court Judge, Justice Nicholas Ndou's decision
in October 2011 ordering him to ensure by-elections for Nkayi South,
Bulilima East and Lupane East were held, as they were constitutionally
long overdue.
Justice and
Legal Affairs Minister, Hon. Patrick Chinamasa, who deposed to an
affidavit on behalf of President Mugabe, who is currently attending
the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Teheran said the ZANU PF leader
is desirous to comply with the court's order and conduct by-elections
not only in the given three Matabeleland constituencies but to fill
the vacant seats in other constituencies in the country.
President Mugabe
argues that conducting "28 parliamentary and senatorial by-elections
together with 164 local authority bye-elections" in the vacant
constituencies is tantamount to holding a mini-general election,
which would require the mobilisation of huge financial resources
and wide consultations of which he has not been able to do so in
the given period due to "his busy schedule" and "circumstances
beyond his control".
Hon. Chinamasa
said President Mugabe is keen to comply with the court order if
it is extended by one month to 1 October 2012 as he would have carried
out extensive consultations with other crucial stakeholders and
mobilised enough resources to cater for the holding of the mini-general
election.
President Mugabe
was initially hauled to the High Court by three former MDC legislators
Abednico Bhebhe, Njabuliso Mguni and Norman Mpofu in 2010 after
their parliamentary membership was terminated following their suspension
and subsequent expulsion from the MDC party.
In opposing
President Mugabe's Supreme Court appeal, Bhebhe, Mguni and
Mpofu were represented by Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights member,
Ndabezinhle Mazibuko, of Calderwood Bryce Hendrie & Partners
Legal Practitioners, while the ZANU PF leader was represented by
Advocate Ray Goba, who was instructed by the Civil Division of the
Attorney General's office.
The disclosures
by President Mugabe on the lack of financial resources to fund by-elections
confirms the abstemious revelations by Finance Minister Hon. Tendai
Biti, who has repeatedly cautioned those clamouring for the staging
of general elections that the government's purse was empty
and could only fund a referendum on a new draft governance charter.
Visit
the ZLHR fact
sheet
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