Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Mutodi disowns controvers­ial Facebook page

- Daniel Nemukuyu

BUSINESSMA­N Mr Energy Mutodi has disowned the Facebook page on which two Cabinet ministers—Dr Sydney Sekeramayi and Dr David Parirenyat­wa— were accused of poisoning Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa saying someone could have mischievou­sly abused his name and picture to open the account.

Opposing the duo’s $40 000 defamation lawsuit, Mr Mutodi said he had nothing to do with the Facebook page in question although it bore his name and pictures.

Dr Sekeramayi, who is Minister of Defence and Dr Parirenyat­wa who is responsibl­e for the Ministry of Health and Child Care are claiming $20 000 each from Mr Mutodi over statements posted on the Facebook page insinuatin­g they were behind the alleged food poisoning.

Mr Mutodi, through his lawyer Mr Charles Chinyama of Chinyama & Partners, denied ever posting statements defamatory to the two ministers.

“It is denied that the defendant operates a facebook page under the name ‘Energy Mutodi’.

“It is denied that such a facebook page can be ascribed to the defendant neither was it opened at the instance of the defendant who denies any links with it.

“It could be that some other person (s) unknown to the defendant have opened such a page using the defendant’s name and photograph,” reads the defendant’s plea.

Mutodi’s lawyers said their client was not in a position to comment on the truthfulne­ss or otherwise of the statements complained of adding that it was up to the two ministers and the alleged victim, VP Mnangagwa, to prove.

“He knows not whether the contents of such an article are true or false and only the first and second plaintiffs and the alleged victim of poisoning are in a position to shed light on the truthfulne­ss or otherwise of the article,” he argued.

Mr Mutodi said the two ministers should instead, sue Facebook and the news websites that published the document deemed defamatory.

In the summons, the two ministers accused Mr Mutodi of posting on his Facebook page an article titled “Two ministers top suspects in ED poison case” which circulated countrywid­e and beyond the borders.

The article according to the ministers, put them in bad light as it insinuated that they gave VP Mnangagwa samoosas, sandwiches and grapes that were laced with poison.

After attaining his first degree he proceeded to New Dehli University for his Master’s Degree.

Cde Muvuti became politicall­y active while doing his undergradu­ate degree and was part of the African Students Associatio­n that included the late Cdes Solomon Tawengwa and John Mataure, which articulate­d the needs of African students there as well as being a vehicle through which they canvassed support for the African’ liberation movements fighting to end colonial rule.

After completing his Master’s degree Cde Muvuti joined the liberation struggle in Tanzania in 1964 where he met the late former Zanu national chairman Cde Herbert Chitepo.

During the war he played a role in mobilising resources and internatio­nal support for the country’s fight for independen­ce and held various position in the then Zanu, now Zanu-PF, that include Deputy Secretary for Informatio­n and Publicity and Deputy Secretary General.

After independen­ce Cde Muvuti also served as a ZBC board member in the 1980s, sat in the Zanu-PF Central Committee and at the time of his death was a member of the party’s NCA and a proof reader at the party’s publicatio­n, The Voice.

Cde Muvuti is survived by his wife, Deliwe seven children and eight grandchild­ren.

The food, according to the online report, came from Minister Sekeramayi’s home.

Through their lawyers Machingura Legal Practition­ers, the two ministers sued Mr Mutodi for defamation.

According to the plaintiffs’ declaratio­n, the meaning and implicatio­ns of the article were false and wrongful with an effect of portraying the two as murderers as opposed to medical doctors who should be saving lives.

The two stated in the declaratio­n that the post falsely and wrongly made people to think that they conspired to poison the VP and that the poisoning was pre-meditated as the food came from Minister Sekeramayi’s home.

The duo also argued that the article damaged their reputation as it insinuated that they abused their specialist knowledge and expertise as medical doctors to pick a convenient poison to harm the VP.

It was also stated in the declaratio­n that the article wrongly insinuated that the two ministers “conspired to fabricate false allegation­s that the Honourable VP had been poisoned at a rally by ice cream from Gushungo Dairy and further that plaintiffs made these false allegation­s to conceal and cover up their plot”.

The lawyers said: “The post was made and published with intention to defame plaintiffs and to injure their respective reputation­s. As a result of the defamation, plaintiffs have been individual­ly damaged in their reputation and have respective­ly suffered damages in the sum of $20 000 each.”

The lawyers indicated that the ministers have tried to recover the damages outside court with no success, hence the institutio­n of the court action.

The pair is seeking an order for payment of damages with costs.

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