The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Bond notes: Mujuru hits brick wall again

- Fidelis Munyoro Chief Court Reporter Crime Reporter

EMBATTLED Zimbabwe People First leader Dr Joice Mujuru hit another snag yesterday after her applicatio­n challengin­g the validity of a Presidenti­al decree that introduced bond notes last year was struck off the roll

e bond notes, introduced in $2 and $5 denominati­ons and backed by a $200 million African Export Import Bank (Afreximban­k) loan facility, are at par with the United States dollar.

The Constituti­onal Court made a ruling on a procedural point raised by President Mugabe and his co-respondent­s.

The point being that Dr Mujuru should A 24-YEAR-OLD Chitungwiz­a woman was on Saturday allegedly beaten to death by her husband following an altercatio­n over a used condom she had found in his pockets while doing laundry.

Police confirmed the incident yesterday and said investigat­ions were underway.

Police spokespers­on Chief Superinten­dent Paul Nyathi expressed concern over the increase in crimes of passion.

“The Zimbabwe Republic Police is first challenge the Presidenti­al (Temporary Measures) Powers Act under which the President acted to introduce the bond notes.

In their unanimous decision, the nine judges felt there was no justificat­ion for implicatin­g the President on the basis that he breached the Constituti­onal Court applicatio­n.

Dr Mujuru, who was being represente­d by constituti­onal law expert Professor Lovemore Madhuku, had gone directly to the apex court challengin­g the action of President Mugabe in promulgati­ng the disputed legal instrument.

The court, however, felt this could not be done before challengin­g the law itself.

In the end, outgoing Chief Justice God- frey Chidyausik­u ruled that the matter be struck off the roll.

“The court having considered the papers filed of record in this matter and submission­s by counsel is of the unanimous decision that the preliminar­y point be upheld and the matter is struck off the role with costs,” said Chief Justice Chidyausik­u.

This means that if they want to pursue the case, Dr Mujuru and her lawyers have to go back to the drawing board and re-launch it this time at the High Court.

President Mugabe, who was being represente­d by Ms Fortune Chimbaru from the Attorney-General’s Office, raised a point that Dr Mujuru was improperly before the court.

Ms Chimbaru said Dr Mujuru followed the wrong procedure in bringing her applicatio­n under Section 167(2) of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe.

She said the applicatio­n should have been made under Section 85 of the Constituti­on for purposes of seeking first to declare the Presidenti­al (Temporary Measures) Powers Act unconstitu­tional.

Appearing for Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Advocate Thabani Mpofu argued that the Sections 2 and I67 (2) of the Constituti­on cited by Prof Madhuku could not ground a jurisdicti­onal basis upon which the court could determine the case.

Dr Mujuru was seeking an order declaring that President Mugabe, by exercising Parliament’s primary law-making power through Statutory Instrument 133 of 2016, failed to fulfil his constituti­onal obligation­s to obey certain provisions of the Constituti­on.

Last September, the apex court threw out Dr Mujuru’s request to nullify the executive decree, saying the challenge was premature and speculativ­e because the disputed currency was not yet in circulatio­n.

Two months later, Mujuru went back to the Constituti­onal Court to contest the legality of the Presidenti­al decree providing a legal framework for the introducti­on of the bond notes as legal tender.

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