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Anti-graft
crusade or succession purge?
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted
from Weekly Media Update 2004-13
Monday March 29th - Sunday April 4th 2004
The publicity
over government's anti-graft campaign assumed a new dimension in
a week that saw government gazette an Anti-Corruption Bill seeking
to establish a commission to fight graft (The Herald, 29/3).
The Herald and Chronicle (1/4) revealed that ZANU-PF's supreme decision-making
body, the politburo, had appointed a committee to investigate companies
owned by the ruling party. However, the papers did not go beyond
the official pronouncement, merely presenting this news as part
of government's genuine determination to stamp out corruption. For
example, they did not question why the ruling party should now suddenly
investigate its companies whose operations have been shrouded in
secrecy for two decades. Neither did they furnish readers with the
full list of the companies, their backgrounds or directorship.
A whiff of this information appeared in The Sunday Mirror (4/4),
which revealed, for the first time, the identities of the directors
in ZANU-PF's holding company, ZIDCO, as Jayant Joshi, and his brother
Manharlal Chunibal. The two were said to have fled the country,
following the politburo's decision to probe the businesses. The
paper suggested that the probe might also suck in Speaker of Parliament
Emmerson Mnangagwa, who, as the ruling party's former finance secretary
"was instrumental in weaving the intricate web of ZANU PF's business
interests locally and regionally". Mnangagwa was reported to have
worked closely with Joshi. But the paper failed to view this development
in the context of Mugabe's succession, especially in view of previous
media reports alleging intense lobbying by some ZANU PF bigwigs
designed to derail Mnangagwa's ascendancy to the helm of the party.
This angle only found currency in the international media. For instance,
Business Day (6/4) reported some ruling party officials as questioning
the composition of the committee investigating the companies saying
it was targeted at Mnangagwa whom Mugabe apparently now wants eliminated
from the succession topic.
SW Radio Africa (29/3) presented similar views during its analysis
of other cases of corruption, in which Mnangagwa has been implicated.
As if to counter such moves, Mnangagwa recently appointed the embattled
self-proclaimed black empowerment guru, Philip Chiyangwa, to chair
the parliamentary portfolio committee on anti-corruption and anti-monopolies
(Zimbabwe Independent, 2/4).
Interestingly, media reports have previously linked Chiyangwa to
a camp that supports Mnangagwa's candidacy for the presidency of
the ruling party. Besides, Chiyangwa is currently on bail facing
charges of obstructing the course of justice in a fraud case involving
ENG Asset Management directors, accused of swindling their clients
of $61 billion. But none of the media fully explored this development
or related it neatly to the current in-house fighting within ZANU
PF, sparked by the scramble for Mugabe's position.
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