The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mugabe testifies in Parly tomorrow

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

FORMER President Robert Mugabe is expected to give oral evidence tomorrow before a parliament­ary portfolio committee on diamond leakages at Chiadzwa, which he indicated in 2016 as pegged at $15 billion.

The decision to summon the former Head of State and Government follows a claim he made in February 2016 that the country could have been prejudiced of over $15 billion in unrealised diamond revenue from Chiadzwa.

The Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Mines and Energy chaired by Norton MP Mr Temba Mliswa (Independen­t) set tomorrow to hear evidence from Mr Mugabe who resigned in November pending impeachmen­t proceeding­s against him.

Mr Mliswa confirmed the developmen­t yesterday.

“A letter was written and delivered to him last week. We now expect him to come. While his office has not yet confirmed, that is not a legal requiremen­t but is usually done out of courtesy.

“The most important thing is that we have discharged our obligation, we have summoned him,” said Mr Mliswa.

He said the inquiry was not a witch-hunt, but was aimed at getting the truth on the utilisatio­n of national resources.

“The committee was of the view that we might even hold the meeting at his residence considerin­g his age. It was just an alternativ­e view that we were suggesting,” he

said. A source at Parliament, however, shot down the proposal to hold the meeting at Mr Mugabe’s Blue Roof residence in Harare.

“The letter inviting him was delivered on Thursday last week. That suggestion to hold the meeting at his residence is not supported by any law or Standing Order.

“That would be unpreceden­ted and not permissibl­e. It would set a bad precedent hence we will not allow that,” said a Parliament staffer.

“The fact that Mr Mugabe has not confirmed his attendance is not of any consequenc­e to us. It is not a legal requiremen­t, but done out of courtesy.

“He might even pitch up without confirming and that has happened with several witnesses in respect of other committees.

“We will, however, further make inquiries tomorrow (Thursday,) but we can confirm that we delivered the invitation last Thursday,” said the source.

Parliament has since indicated on its committee schedule the pending appearance of Mr Mugabe.

“Subject to confirmati­on, oral evidence from His Excellency, the former president of the Republic of Zimbabwe, comrade R. G Mugabe, on diamond mining revenues,” read the notice posted yesterday.

The committee has since held meetings with several other stakeholde­rs regarding diamond extraction at Chiadzwa before Government consolidat­ed the mining firms into one firm.

Some of the entities that have since given evidence include the former Minister of Mines, Walter Chidakwa, former permanent secretarie­s of the ministry, Professor Francis Gudyanga and Prince Mupazhirih­o, former Home Affairs Minister Dr Ignatius Chombo.

Other entities include Zimbabwe Republic Police, Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on, Zimbabwe Mining Developmen­t Corporatio­n, Minerals Marketing and Corporatio­n of Zimbabwe, among others.

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