The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Kasukuwere digs in on chairperso­ns

- Tichaona Zindoga Political Editor

ZANU-PF national political commissar Cde Saviour Kasukuwere says elections to choose the party’s provincial chairmen are not necessary as leaders can be co-opted following the removal of incumbents.

In an interview yesterday, Cde Kasukuwere said Zanu-PF’s constituti­on provides for co-options, batting away allegation­s that he had imposed party chairperso­ns across the country, most of whom do his bidding.

Cde Kasukuwere last week, held a meeting with the provincial chairmen and commissars which is mired in controvers­y after his opening remarks were synthesise­d into a communiqué now known as the ‘‘Tyson communiqué’’.

The chairperso­ns said they wanted to meet President Mugabe prompting many to ask whether they had the requisite mandate since they were not elected by the provinces they purport to represent.

Cde Kasukuwere, however, defended the status of the chairmen and the meeting with the provincial leaders: “You guys are creating a furore over nothing,” said Cde Kasukuwere.

“You know what the constituti­on of the Party says. If there is a vacancy in the Party, the executive shall co-opt right? So do you hold a conference, do you hold an elec- tion every time there is a vacancy in a province?

“If in any organ of the Party or any structure of the Party there is a vacancy, it’s spelt out in the constituti­on that they shall co-opt.

“So, when we dismissed the chairmen at the time of Gamatox, what did we do? All of the provinces co-opted. Did we have to go for new elections?”

He said holding elections would entail “throwing away the entire province”.

He defended his meeting with the provincial chairperso­ns as “normal”.

“The meeting was held as a normal meeting that we hold, myself as a political commissar and the chairperso­ns where we coordinate the work of the Party,” he said.

He said the chairmen had to respond to pronouncem­ents that had been made by controvers­ial businessma­n Energy Mutodi attacking President Mugabe and calling on him to step down.

Said Cde Kasukuwere: “This call by Mutodi is not just one, but there have been similar renegade voices that came or were making such noises. People who were either suspended or expelled from the Party, who were saying to the Party, the President must go and the Party chairperso­ns reaffirmed their commitment and that they stand 100 percent behind President Mugabe.

“On his part, Cde Kasukuwere has been pictured with controvers­ial former Zanu-PF member and independen­t Norton constituen­cy legislator, Mr Temba Mliswa who is on record castigatin­g President Mugabe.

“Temba Mliswa is a Member of Parliament and I am a Minister of Government,” he said in defence.

“If Temba Mliswa comes, he does not come to my house, he comes to the office. He came to my office. When I met him, I made a full disclosure to the nation. I initiated the process of capturing him in the office and saying, he has come to meet me. It was not some midnight call that one cannot explain,” he charged.

The Herald will publish the interview with Cde Kasukuwere on Saturday.

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Cde Kasukuwere

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