Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Fight against corruption not witch-hunt, says VP Mohadi

- Mashudu Netsianda

VICE-PRESIDENT Kembo Mohadi has said the ongoing crusade against corruption is not a witch-hunt against members of the G40 cabal.

VP Mohadi said authoritie­s are only targeting all criminal elements regardless of their political affiliatio­n.

His comments come in the wake of recent remarks by the opposition MDC-T party’s secretaryg­eneral Mr Douglas Mwonzora claiming that the arrests and prosecutio­ns of former Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Ignatius Chombo and former Zanu-PF Youth League leaders Messrs Kudzanai Chipanga and Innocent Hamandishe “were seemingly selective applicatio­n of the law.”

The trio that has since appeared in court is aligned to the G40 faction whose kingpin former Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Professor Jonathan Moyo, is in self-imposed exile at an unknown location.

Members of the G40 cabal were last year in November expelled from the ruling Zanu-PF after they had created a constituti­onal crisis in the country, taking advantage of their proximity to the then First Family via former First Lady, Mrs Grace Mugabe.

Prof Moyo is accused of siphoning more than $400 000 from a State-owned enterprise — the Zimbabwe Manpower Developmen­t Fund (Zimdef).

In an interview with The Chronicle yesterday, VP Mohadi dismissed the claims of selective applicatio­n of the law as “nonsensica­l” and unfounded.

“It doesn’t work that way. We are targeting everyone who is a criminal and corrupt and those who are claiming that we are only targeting a certain group of individual­s are talking nonsense and their claims are baseless and unfounded.

“We have courts where the issue of guilt or innocence will be proven,” he said.

“Whatever critics are saying is sheer waste of time as we are forging ahead in the fight against corruption until sanity is restored in all sectors of the economy in line with the Government thrust in the new dispensati­on.”

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said his administra­tion was committed to rooting out corruption across all socio-economic spectrums.

He also warned those who have been implicated in corruption and the looting of State resources to confess and to voluntaril­y surrender their ill-gotten loot.

e Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc) is reportedly investigat­ing a number of senior politician­s since the fall of former President Robert Mugabe.

Days after his inaugurati­on, President Mnangagwa, as part of his efforts to clean up and resuscitat­e the economy, announced a three-month amnesty to allow all those who externalis­ed funds to return the money and assets with no questions being asked.

The President said his administra­tion was aware of the individual­s and companies who had externalis­ed funds.

President Mnangagwa’s call for the return of externalis­ed funds has been heeded and as evidenced by substantia­l millions, which have since been returned, he said recently.

The Government last month directed Ministers, their deputies, permanent secretarie­s, senior principal directors, board chairperso­ns and board members of State enterprise­s and parastatal­s, and chief executive officers of State enterprise­s to declare their assets by not later than February 28.

This is in line with the fundamenta­l tenets of good corporate governance.

Also expected to declare their assets are chairperso­ns and members of constituti­onal commission­s (both executive and independen­t) and chief executive officers of local authoritie­s.

The mentioned officials are expected to submit a written declaratio­n of their assets by the said date. — @ mashnets

 ??  ?? VP Kembo Mohadi
VP Kembo Mohadi

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