The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ED salutes Chiwenga, Mudenda, Mpofu

- Bulawayo Bureau

PRESIDENT Mnangagwa has paid tribute to Vice President General Constantin­o Chiwenga (Retired), Home Affairs and Culture Minister Dr Obert Mpofu and Speaker of Parliament Advocate Jacob Mudenda for playing leading roles in burying former president Robert Mugabe’s dark era and bringing about the new political dispensati­on.

He said the interventi­on by the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF), then led by Gen Chiwenga (Rtd), aided Zimbabwe’s return to constituti­onalism.

Addressing a bumper crowd at Nabushome Primary School on Friday, the President said the three leaders took brave decisions in their capacities to guide the nation towards a peaceful transition that culminated in Mr Mugabe’s resignatio­n.

He said Gen Chiwenga (Rtd) in his capacity as ZDF Commander understood the responsibi­lity of the security sector in protecting the Constituti­on.

“The security sector found it necessary that the flouting of the Constituti­on by members who were not in the Executive was not proper,” said President Mnangagwa.

“The criminals who had surrounded our former president had to be removed in order for this country to go back to constituti­onalism.”

President Mnangagwa said Dr Mpofu, who is Zanu-PF Secretary for Administra­tion, guided the party accordingl­y as the most senior at that time, while Adv Mudenda led parliament­ary processes.

“There are two men amongst us here that I want you to take note of. There is Obert Mpofu and Speaker of Parliament (Jacob) Mudenda,” said Cde Mnangagwa, calling on the two leaders to stand up.

He went on: “You see these two men, Mudenda is head of Parliament. When things got bad, in the party we had the Central Com-

mittee, which saw thousands of Zimbabwean­s taking to the streets demanding Mugabe to step down. What they demanded had to happen, but there is a proper way to do things.”

President Mnangagwa said out of the 300 Central Committee members, 260 met at that time to discuss the state of affairs in the country and Government.

“The most senior among them was Obert Mpofu who chaired that meeting which expelled the entire G40 cabal and those who were insulting us and left pure Zanu-PF cadres,” he said.

“In Parliament, Mudenda appreciate­d that the Constituti­on of the country must be protected and defended. He is the man who defended the Constituti­on.

“When Parliament decided to go for impeachmen­t, there was an appeal from the former president not to proceed, but the Speaker

(Mudenda) stood his ground and said I am guided by the law and not the wishes of an individual.

“He could have succumbed to that pressure, but he stood by the law, by the Constituti­on and was ready to suffer the consequenc­es of standing by the law.”

At the end of the day, President Mnangagwa said the former president decided not to face impeachmen­t and resigned. After Mr Mugabe resigned, the President said Zanu-PF led by Dr Mpofu resolved to call him back from exile where he had fled for safety after threats to eliminate him following his firing from both Zanu-PF and Government. The party also reinstated him as its Vice President.

In terms of the Constituti­on, the party with a majority in Parliament should nominate the person to assume the Presidency when a vacancy arises.

President Mnangagwa said Dr

Mpofu led Zanu-PF to nominate him to take up the position of the President of the country. “This is why I am here,” he said. “I then came and was sworn in on the 24th of November last year. From that day, 24th November, Zimbabwe is different, Zimbabwe has a vision, it has hope and is united.

“We should move forward together as Zimbabwe, a unitary State and not a federation, with one flag and one national anthem. This is the Zimbabwe we know, Zimbabwe we are living and will leave to the next generation.”

President Mnangagwa dismissed claims that his administra­tion assumed power through a “bloody coup”, saying the entire transition process was peaceful.

“No blood was shed, not even a glass was broken,” he said.

“Our people throughout the transition period were peaceful.”

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