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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Zanu
PF big guns walk out of crucial Cabinet meeting
Violet
Gonda, SW Radio Africa
June 18,
2013
http://www.swradioafrica.com/2013/06/18/zanu-pf-big-guns-walk-out-of-crucial-cabinet-meeting/
Zanu-PF “big
guns” dramatically left en masse an hour after a Cabinet meeting,
which was due to discuss the crucial election roadmap, started on
Tuesday. The meeting was also supposed to discuss an agreement
made by the political parties at the just ended SADC summit, to
send Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa to ask the Constitutional
Court for a two-week delay in the election date.
The Cabinet
was meeting on Tuesday for the first time since President Robert
Mugabe unilaterally declared,
last Thursday, that elections
will be held on July 31st.
Cabinet meetings
are private but some ministers, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
told SW Radio Africa that Mugabe and his deputy Joice Mujuru were
left to discuss the post-Maputo SADC summit and the election roadmap
with only three other Zanu-PF ministers Walter Mzembi, Joseph Made
and Herbert Murerwa.
Zanu-PF ministers
who left before anything substantial had been discussed included
Emmerson Mnangangwa, Nicholas Goche, Sydney Sekeremayi and Ignatius
Chombo.
“Their
big guns were not there. They left Cabinet after an hour and we
had not discussed anything controversial. We had only discussed
the movement of grain, correcting of last week’s minutes and
discussing whether dams are full or empty. After that the whole
lot of them left at the same time. It was obvious they had a political
strategy meeting somewhere.
“They
left at 10 o’clock. So by the time we were discussing election
matters they were not there and the Zanu-PF ministers who were left
were really not in a position to debate anything meaningful,”
said a source.
The development
come a day after the SADC executive secretary Tomaz Salomão
told SW Radio Africa that the political parties had resolved to
use the first two days of this week to “to agree on the issues
they feel have to be attended to before they go back to the Constitutional
Court to request for more time.” But sources said it is clear
that political games and delaying tactics are being played as on
Monday a Principals meeting had to be cancelled, because Mugabe
left the country for Botswana.
Another minister
said Cabinet then decided the proper forum to now determine the
election way forward is at “political level and not at cabinet
level.” It was decided that the political leaders will meet
Wednesday (Morgan Tsvangirai, Robert Mugabe, Arthur Mutambara and
Welshman Ncube).
One of the ministers
said: “The way forward now? All of that will be determined
in the meeting of the political leaders. We said in Maputo we need
more time to deal with the legal processes. So the political leaders
(principals) will discuss how we are going to go about and decide
on who is going to do what.”
Chinamasa was
expected to send the Electoral Amendment Bill to parliament on Tuesday
but that too has been put on hold until the principals decide what
to do. This is the bill that was passed by cabinet last week where
Mugabe used a presidential decree to controversially fast track
amendments to the Electoral
Act to by-pass parliament, in a move that angered his coalition
government partners.
Another minister
revealed that Tuesday’s Cabinet debate, with the few Zanu-PF
ministers, centered on the ‘rushed’ presidential proclamation.
“We discussed how did we get to where we were fighting each
other in Maputo? How did we get to ambushing each other with a proclamation?
And how can we chart a way forward.
“You obviously
can’t resolve all these problems at Cabinet level as people
speak as individuals at Cabinet. You can speak for ten hours and
it won’t help. So we decided that it needs to be discussed
at the highest level, by the principals, to give clear guidance
on what is possible and what is not possible.”
The cabinet
ministers said Wednesday’s Principals meeting should resolve:
whether to revoke Mugabe’s proclamation, how to revoke it,
whether to take the Electoral Amendment Bill to parliament,
how to approach the Constitutional Court and with what timelines.
Whilst the cabinet
agreed that the principals would deal with all these issues, the
Justice Minister is said to have gone ahead and filed a court application
seeking an extension of election date without consulting the other
political partners. We were not able to reach Chinamasa for comment
but an MDC-T official confirmed this latest development whilst at
a public debate organised by the SAPES
Trust late Tuesday.
Youth activist
Sydney Chisi said the MDC-T’s Jameson Timba told the people
at the gathering that he had received a phone call saying Chinamasa
had filed a court application seeking an extension of the election
date. “He is the sole applicant and all the principals are
respondents, yet the inclusive government is supposed to be the
applicant as directed by SADC,” Chisi said.
SW Radio
Africa is Zimbabwe's Independent Voice and broadcasts on Short Wave
4880 KHz in the 60m band.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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